Journal of Acute Care Surgery (Apr 2016)

Ideal Time to Surgery for Acute Abdomen

  • Maru Kim,
  • Ji Hoon Kim,
  • Sung Jeep Kim,
  • Hang Joo Cho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17479/jacs.2016.6.1.7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 7 – 10

Abstract

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Timing of surgery is important for prognosis. In patients with acute abdomen, the urgency means timing of surgery is even more important. However early emergency surgery is often logistically daunting because of constraints on resources such as operating room, supporting anesthesiologist, and nurses. Therefore it is worthwhile reviewing the timing of surgery in the patient with acute abdomen. The authors discuss the ideal time to surgery based on their experience and a review of the literature. For appendicitis and for peptic ulcer perforation, the authors recommend surgery within 24 hours from symptom onset. However, for other acute abdomen disease, evidence for a consensus is not as strong. If a surgeon faces a large number of emergent patients, if resources are limited, the surgeon must decide priorities for surgery. Therefore, an emergency triage system is needed, based on expert opinion and evidence. Although several triage systems are described in the literature, there is some controversy. If we follow a triage system, utilization of resources will be more efficient and acute care surgery might be performed within the ideal time.

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