Laparoscopic Appendicectomy

Safe, keyhole removal of the inflamed appendix for both emergency acute appendicitis and elective interval cases — with a 5–7 day return to normal life and minimal scarring.

24–48 HrHospital Stay
5–7 DaysRecovery
3 CutsKeyhole Incisions
EmergencyCases Covered
Call +91 93533 16175 Book Appointment
Dr. Prashanth J V
Dr. Prashanth J V
MBBS · MS · FMAS · FISCP · DMAS · Kiel University, Germany
4.9/5 Rating
27+ Years Experience

Understanding Appendicitis

The appendix is a small, finger-shaped pouch attached to the large intestine in the lower-right abdomen. In appendicitis, the appendix becomes blocked — usually by hardened stool, a mucus plug, or swollen lymph nodes — causing bacterial overgrowth, inflammation, and progressive swelling. Without treatment, the appendix can rupture within 24–72 hours, causing peritonitis — a life-threatening infection spreading throughout the abdomen. Appendicitis is one of the most common surgical emergencies worldwide.

There are two main presentations: Acute appendicitis requires emergency surgery within hours. Interval (elective) appendicectomy is planned after initial antibiotic management of mild appendicitis — surgery is performed several weeks later to prevent the 25–30% recurrence risk.

Laparoscopic appendicectomy is the gold standard — delivering superior outcomes to open surgery in terms of wound infection, pain, hospital stay, and return to normal activity. Dr. Prashanth J V is available for both emergency and elective cases.

🚨 Emergency Symptoms — Seek Care Immediately
  • Pain beginning around the navel, shifting to lower right abdomen over 6–12 hours
  • Fever of 38°C or above
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Loss of appetite
  • Rebound tenderness (pain when pressure suddenly released)
  • Inability to pass gas or bloating (possible perforation)

Emergency or Elective?

We manage both. Contact Dr. Prashanth J V immediately for any acute abdominal symptoms.

Book Consultation 📞 +91 93533 16175

How Laparoscopic Appendicectomy Is Performed

The procedure takes 30–45 minutes under general anaesthesia. You wake up with 3 small incisions — each under 1.5 cm — and can eat and walk the same day.

1
Anaesthesia & Positioning

General anaesthesia is administered. The abdomen is cleaned and the patient positioned. The surgical site is confirmed by clinical examination and imaging.

2
Port Placement

Three small incisions: one at the navel (camera port, 10–12 mm), one in the lower right abdomen (5 mm), and one in the left lower quadrant (5 mm). CO2 inflates the abdomen.

3
Appendix Identification

The entire abdominal cavity is inspected. The appendix is identified and assessed. Any free fluid or pus is noted and sampled for culture.

4
Appendix Removal

The blood supply to the appendix is controlled using clips or an energy device. A linear stapler seals and divides the base securely. The appendix is placed in a retrieval bag.

5
Extraction & Irrigation

The appendix is removed. If perforation has occurred, the abdomen is thoroughly irrigated with warm saline. Incisions are closed with absorbable sutures.

What to Expect After Appendicectomy

Days 1–2

Rest at home. Mild incision soreness managed with regular analgesics. Walking around the home encouraged from day 1.

Days 3–5

Walking freely. Light diet advancing to normal food. Minimal discomfort at incision sites.

Day 7

Most desk workers return to work. No driving until off strong pain medication.

Week 4

Full activity including exercise and heavy lifting. No long-term restrictions after uncomplicated appendicectomy.

Why Patients Choose Dr. Prashanth J V

🚨
Emergency & Elective

Available for emergency appendicitis around the clock. Elective interval appendicectomy planned carefully for optimal outcomes.

🔬
Laparoscopic First

Superior outcomes versus open surgery — lower infection rates, less pain, shorter hospital stay, and better cosmetic results.

📋
Complete Abdominal Assessment

Laparoscopy allows full inspection of the abdominal cavity — valuable when the diagnosis is uncertain or other pathology is suspected.

Frequently Asked Questions

An untreated inflamed appendix fills with pus and typically ruptures within 24–72 hours. Rupture causes peritonitis — a dangerous, widespread abdominal infection requiring longer, more complex surgery, prolonged hospital stay, and a much slower recovery. Early surgery is always safer, with significantly lower complication rates.
Yes, for the vast majority of patients. Laparoscopic appendicectomy has lower wound infection rates, less post-operative pain, a shorter hospital stay, faster return to work, and better cosmetic results. It also allows full inspection of the entire abdominal cavity — valuable when diagnosis is uncertain.
No. The appendix is completely and permanently removed during the operation. It does not regenerate. You will have no appendix for the rest of your life — without any adverse health consequences.
Perforated appendicitis requires thorough abdominal irrigation to remove pus and contamination, and sometimes drain placement. Recovery is longer (3–5 days in hospital, 2–3 weeks at home). The laparoscopic approach still delivers better outcomes than open surgery in experienced hands, even for perforation.
Yes, completely. Begin with clear fluids post-operatively, advance to soft foods within 24 hours, and return to a completely normal diet by day 3–5. There are no long-term dietary restrictions after appendix removal.

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Experiencing Abdominal Pain?

Don't delay — appendicitis can become an emergency rapidly. Book a consultation or call Dr. Prashanth J V directly for prompt assessment.

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