Open Access Emergency Medicine (Jun 2023)

Diagnosis of Acute Appendicitis: A Cross-sectional Study on Alvarado’s Score from a Low Income Country

  • Gebreselassie H,
  • Zeleke H,
  • Ashebir D

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 15
pp. 253 – 258

Abstract

Read online

Hana Gebreselassie,1 Henok Zeleke,2 Daniel Ashebir2 1Department of Surgery, St. Paul’s Hospital Millennium Medical College, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; 2Department of Surgery, Addis Ababa University, College of Health Sciences, Addis Ababa, EthiopiaCorrespondence: Hana Gebreselassie, Department of Surgery, St. Paul’s Hospital Millennium Medical College, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Email [email protected]: Alvarado score is the most widely used scoring system for diagnosing acute appendicitis, globally. There have been concerns regarding the diagnostic accuracy of this score as it was shown to have lower sensitivity in certain populations like Blacks and Asians. Despite its wide clinical use in the Ethiopian set up, the diagnostic accuracy of this score remained largely unexamined in this population.Methodology: A prospective cross-sectional study was conducted and all adult patients who presented with right lower quadrant abdominal pain and evaluated with a clinical impression of acute appendicitis were enrolled in the study. Data was collected by trained surgical residents over a period of six months (August 2019– January 2020) and analysed using SPSS version 25.Results: A total of 235 patients were enrolled in this study among whom two thirds were males. The majority of the study participants (61.7%) had an Alvarado score of ≥ 7 while almost a quarter of them had a score of < 4. The mean Alvarado score in this study was 7 ± 1.8 whereas the median and the mode were 7 and 9 respectively. The overall sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of Alvarado score were 99.1%, 55.6%, 98.2% and 62.5% respectively. The sensitivity and specificity of this score was superior in males compared to females (99.3% vs 97.6% and 80% vs 25%). A score of ≥ 5 was found to have a sensitivity of 98.4%.Conclusion: Alvarado score was found to have good sensitivity and positive predictive value in this study. A score of ≥ 5 can be used to “rule in” the diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Hence, the use of Alvarado score’s in the Ethiopian setup is to be encouraged.Keywords: Alvarado score, acute appendicitis, sensitivity, specificity

Keywords