Whether amoxicillin is effective in patients with appendicitis depends on the severity and nature of the appendicitis as well as the causative organism that causes it.
1. Amoxicillin is effective if the patient’s appendicitis is a relatively mild form of appendicitis, acute simple appendicitis, chronic appendicitis, or if the infecting agent is sensitive to amoxicillin.
2. If the patient’s appendicitis is more serious, such as acute suppurative appendicitis, necrotizing appendicitis, fecalithic appendicitis, etc., the general treatment of amoxicillin is no obvious effect, the most effective treatment is to remove the diseased appendix through surgery.
The most effective treatment is to remove the diseased appendix through surgery. Patients with appendicitis are advised to go to regular hospitals in time, to clarify the cause of the disease under the guidance of the doctor, and to choose the appropriate program for treatment.