The main treatment for appendicitis is surgery to get rid of the appendix. Surgery can be done in couple of ways:
- Open surgery – During open surgery, the doctor makes a cut within the belly near the appendix. Then he removes the appendix through the opening.
- Laparoscopic surgery – During laparoscopic surgery, the doctor makes a couple of cuts within the belly that are much smaller than cuts for open surgery. Doctor puts long, thin tools into the belly through these openings. One amongst the tools contains a camera (called a “laparoscope”) on the top, which sends pictures to a TV screen. The doctor can examine the image on the screen to understand where to cut and what to remove. Then he uses the tools to do the surgery.
If your child’s appendix has burst, the doctor will do surgery to get rid of the appendix. During the surgery, he or she is going to also clean out the area within the belly around the appendix to clean away the material that spilled out of the burst appendix. This surgery is often more complicated than the surgery that’s done if the appendix has not burst.
If it’s been over a couple of days since your child’s appendix burst, your child won’t have surgery right away. That is because the body sometimes forms a wall inside the abdomen, to block off the area that became diseased when the appendix burst. In this kind of cases, the doctor will first treat your child with antibiotics and will keep watch on him/her. He or she might take the appendix out once the antibiotics have made your child feel better, or stick a needle in the walled-off area to drain the infected fluid. This treatment is usually done at the same time as an imaging test, so the doctor can see where to place the needle.
After the doctor treats the infection, he or she might recommend that your child have surgery later on.