Lesson 1Indications and timing for follow-up imaging and use of ultrasound or MRI in equivocal or pregnant patientsThis part reviews when to repeat imaging, how clinical changes guide modality choice, and roles of ultrasound and MRI in unclear, child, and pregnant patients while balancing diagnosis value, radiation, and contrast safety.
Clinical triggers for repeat imagingUltrasound technique in suspected appendicitisMRI protocols in pregnancy and pediatricsBalancing radiation risk and diagnostic yieldWhen CT remains necessary in pregnancyLesson 2Antibiotic and perioperative considerations tied to imaging findings (e.g., extent of contamination, abscess)This part links CT findings with antibiotic and perioperative planning, including contamination extent, abscess load, and sepsis risk, and discusses surgery timing, prophylaxis choices, and therapy length based on radiologic severity.
Imaging predictors of severe contaminationAbscess burden and antibiotic spectrumTiming of surgery after source controlCT guidance for postoperative prophylaxisImaging clues to resistant or atypical infectionLesson 3CT features of complicated appendicitis: perforation, phlegmon, localized abscess, free intraperitoneal air, and small-bowel obstructionThis part reviews CT features of complicated appendicitis, including perforation, phlegmon, abscess, free air, and small-bowel obstruction, and discusses spotting subtle signs that change urgency and intervention type.
Direct and indirect signs of perforationDistinguishing phlegmon from abscessDetection of free intraperitoneal airSmall-bowel obstruction related to appendicitisPredictors of postoperative complicationsLesson 4Measurement and characterization of periappendiceal abscesses: size, loculation, gas, and adjacent bowel involvementThis part explains how to measure and describe periappendiceal abscesses on CT, including size, loculation, gas content, and nearby bowel involvement, and how these guide drainage possibility, access path, and urgency.
Standardized abscess size measurementsLoculation, septations, and complexityGas patterns and fistula suspicionAdjacent bowel and organ involvementSelecting candidates for percutaneous drainageLesson 5Contrast-enhanced CT protocols for acute abdomen: oral/IV contrast considerations, phases, and low-dose techniquesThis part details contrast-enhanced CT methods for acute abdomen, covering IV contrast timing, oral contrast uses, phase choice, and low-dose ways that keep diagnostic quality while cutting radiation and contrast risks.
IV contrast timing and injection parametersRole of oral contrast in suspected appendicitisSingle versus multiphasic acquisition choicesLow-dose and iterative reconstruction methodsManaging contrast allergy and renal riskLesson 6Reporting format for abdominal CT in acute appendicitis: concise findings, severity grading, and recommended next stepsThis part outlines a structured CT reporting way for suspected appendicitis, stressing key needed parts, severity grading, clear impression statements, and useful recommendations that support timely, right management.
Essential elements of the CT reportStandardized severity grading systemsClear impression and diagnostic certaintyActionable management recommendationsCommunicating critical and unexpected findingsLesson 7Interventional radiology and surgical decision-making: indications for percutaneous drainage vs. appendectomy vs. antibiotics-first strategiesThis part explains how CT findings affect choice of antibiotics alone, percutaneous drainage, or surgery, stressing abscess size, sepsis, other health issues, and team talk between radiology, surgery, and intervention teams.
CT criteria for antibiotics-first therapyIndications for percutaneous abscess drainageWhen urgent appendectomy is preferredImaging predictors of treatment failurePost-procedure imaging and complication checksLesson 8Primary CT findings of acute appendicitis: appendiceal diameter, wall thickening/enhancement, periappendiceal fat strandingThis part describes primary CT signs of acute appendicitis, including appendiceal diameter, wall thickening, mural enhancement, and periappendiceal fat stranding, and explains measurement ways and traps that can look like or hide disease.
Measuring appendiceal diameter accuratelyAssessing wall thickening and enhancementCharacterizing periappendiceal fat strandingLuminal obstruction, fecalith, and fluidCommon pitfalls and normal variantsLesson 9CT anatomy of the right lower quadrant: appendix variants, cecum, terminal ileum, mesoappendix, and adjacent structuresThis part reviews right lower quadrant anatomy on CT, including cecum, terminal ileum, mesoappendix, and vascular landmarks, and highlights common appendix positions and variants that affect spotting, reading, and possible surgical planning.
Identifying the cecum and ileocecal valveLocating the normal appendix on CTRetrocecal and pelvic appendix positionsMesoappendix, vessels, and lymph nodesCongenital and postsurgical anatomic variantsLesson 10Differentiating appendicitis from mimics: terminal ileitis, Meckel diverticulitis, Crohn disease, epiploic appendagitis, right-sided diverticulitisThis part focuses on CT features that tell appendicitis from key look-alikes, including terminal ileitis, Crohn disease, Meckel diverticulitis, epiploic appendagitis, and right-sided diverticulitis, stressing wall pattern, location, and fat changes.
Terminal ileitis versus appendicitis on CTCrohn disease activity in the right lower quadrantCT signs of Meckel diverticulitisRecognizing epiploic appendagitisRight-sided colonic diverticulitis features