A New Window On The Appendix

The FDA has approved NeutroSpec, a technique that could make it significantly easier to diagnose appendicitis. That's good news because accurate diagnosis is a problem. Half the 700,000 cases of suspected appendicitis in the U.S. each year lack the usual symptoms of fever and pain in the lower right abdomen, and 15% to 40% of all appendectomies prove unnecessary because the appendix turns out to be normal. The new technique uses a radioactive tracer that binds to an infection-fighting white blood cell. Doctors locate the tracer using an imaging device called a gamma camera. In trials, the technique diagnosed nearly 100% of appendicitis cases within an hour. The tool may also be able to pinpoint hard-to-locate infections in other tissues.

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MICHAELE SALAHI, a Virginia socialite, denying that she and her husband crashed a White House state dinner last week. Appearing on the Today show, the pair declined to explain why they attended without an invitation
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MICHAELE SALAHI, a Virginia socialite, denying that she and her husband crashed a White House state dinner last week. Appearing on the Today show, the pair declined to explain why they attended without an invitation

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