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Your right side may hurt so much that you call your doctor. Or maybe you go straight to the hospital emergency room. After your evaluation, your doctor may decide that you have appendicitis. If so, you may need surgery. Your doctor will admit you to the hospital or take you right to the operating room.
You may get fluids and antibiotics through an I.V. (intravenous) line placed in your hand or arm. Tell your doctor if you're allergic to any antibiotics or other medicines. Before surgery, an anesthesiologist or nurse anesthetist will talk with you. They'll give you medicine (general anesthesia) just before your appendectomy. This keeps you pain-free and lets you sleep during the surgery.
The goal of surgery is to remove your appendix safely. In most cases, the surgery lasts about 30 minutes to an hour. If your appendix has burst, bacteria will be released into the belly (abdominal) cavity. This complication may make the surgery take longer. Your surgeon may use open surgery or laparoscopic surgery to reach your appendix. Your surgeon will discuss which is best for you:
Sometimes if the appendix has burst and a pocket of infection has formed, this will be drained. Antibiotics are given for some time (perhaps weeks) before the appendix is removed.
In most cases, the surgeon closes the entire incision with stitches or staples. Your surgeon may place a short-term (temporary) drain in the wound or in your belly. This helps cure or prevent infection. If your appendix burst, your surgeon may leave the outer layers of your incision open. Leaving the skin open prevents infection from forming under the skin. It may heal on its own. Or it may be closed about 5 days later.
Most people recover quickly after an appendectomy. You'll likely be in the hospital for 1 to 2 days. If your appendix burst, you may stay longer. After you return home, plan on a follow-up visit to the doctor in 1 to 2 weeks.
In most cases, you'll drink fluids and walk on the day of your surgery. You'll also be given pain medicine as needed. To help keep your lungs clear, a doctor may teach you how to do cough and deep breathing exercises.
To help control pain from surgery, take your medicines as directed. Don't do any strenuous activity, heavy lifting, or driving until your surgeon says it is okay. As instructed, slowly go back to your normal activities in 7 to 10 days. If you're constipated, take fiber or a stool softener.
Risks and complications can include the following:
Contact your doctor right away if you have any of the following: