Does minimally invasive surgery for appendicitis require general anesthesia?

Minimally invasive surgery for appendicitis requires general anesthesia for all types of laparoscopic procedures because laparoscopic procedures require the implantation of gas in the human abdominal cavity to create an environment for surgical operations, and general anesthesia can reduce the patient’s pain while better maintaining the stability of the anesthetic effect. A mixture of intravenous respiratory anesthesia is usually taken, and because laparoscopic appendectomy does not last too long, the risks of anesthesia are relatively small and more easily controlled. The operation itself is divided into two types, including three-hole resection and single-hole resection of the lumen. The advantages and benefits of laparoscopic appendectomy are less injury and pain, and the results of the operation will be better and the postoperative recovery will be faster, while no obvious scar will be left on the abdominal wall after the operation, and the poking holes for implanting lumpectomy instruments are all smaller and hidden, so they are more aesthetically pleasing.