Is it effective to apply hot compresses of coarse salt to appendicitis?

Clinically, coarse salt hot compresses for appendicitis have no therapeutic effect. Once the diagnosis of appendicitis is confirmed, antibiotic anti-infection treatment should be actively given; in addition, the patient’s water-electrolyte balance should be maintained, and preoperative examinations, such as electrocardiogram, chest X-ray and abdominal ultrasound, should also be actively improved. Once the diagnosis is clear, surgical resection should be performed, and the earlier the time of surgical resection, the better, because for patients, early appendicitis inflammation is lighter and easier to resect, and the chance of complications after surgery will be very small, and the recovery after surgery will be fast, and the patient’s hospital stay will be short, so that the patient’s body can gradually recover. If the appendix becomes septic, perforated or even gangrenous, the situation is more serious and surgery to remove it is not only difficult, but also more difficult for the patient to recover.