What Do Doctors Do?
Any time you have belly pain, you should tell your mom, dad, or other adult who's caring for you. If your doctor thinks you could have appendicitis, you would need to go in for an office visit or to the emergency department. At either place, a doctor will examine you, paying close attention to your belly.
The doctor can check for tenderness over your abdomen, especially over the lower right side of your belly, a spot known as McBurney's point. This spot hurts if a kid has appendicitis.
The doctor also may test a small blood sample to see if there are lots of white blood cells, which means there could be an infection in the body. The doctor may also check a urine sample to make sure there is no infection in the urine. Sometimes, doctors will take a special picture like an X-ray, CAT scan, or ultrasound of the abdomen.
If the doctor decides that a kid has appendicitis, the appendix will need to be removed in an operation. You won't be allowed to eat or drink anything until after the operation.
To prepare for an appendectomy (the name for surgery that removes the appendix), a kid will be given anesthesia. This puts him or her into a kind of deep sleep and keeps the kid from feeling pain during the surgery.
During the operation, a surgeon will make a small cut in the abdomen and remove the appendix. The operation will leave a tiny scar.
After the Appendix Is Gone
After an appendectomy, a kid will stay in the hospital for a few days. The time that kids need to recover from this operation varies, but they usually return to school in about 1 week. Be sure to ask your doctor if you have any questions about this.
A person who's had an appendectomy will feel better soon, and won't feel any different without an appendix. And here's some more good news: The kid won't ever have to worry about appendicitis again!
Reviewed by: Yamini Durani, MD
Date reviewed: July 2012