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A 58-year-old female presented to the emergency department with intermittent right upper quadrant pain and nausea. On examination, the patient was tender and Murphy's sign was elicited. A presumptive diagnosis of acute cholecystitis was made but an ultrasound of the abdomen revealed a thin-walled
A review of the relationship between infarction and arterial obstruction in four major vascular territories--brain, gut, leg, and heart--shows that infarction without demonstrable arterial stenosis is common in the brain and gut though rare in the heart and leg. The converse--arterial occlusion
Embolization of cholesterol crystals from ulcerated atheromatous lesions can produce distinct syndromes that mimic more common disease processes. Cholesterol emboli can present as renal failure, hypertension, spells of numbness, abdominal pain, and myocardial infarction, or as a multisystem disease
The title "great imitator" refers to conditions which can cause varied manifestations and mimic many diseases. Lymphoma is worthy of this title. We describe three cases of lymphoma in which lymphoma mimicked other diseases causing neurological dysfunction, specifically sarcoidosis,
Segmental infarction of the great omentum is a possible aetiology of acute abdominal pain. The diagnosis was difficult before operation and, generally the patient was operated upon with the diagnosis of appendicitis, or less often by laparotomy. The laparoscopy appears to be nowadays the ideal way
The illnesses of two patients with characteristic symptoms of subacute carbon monoxide poisoning were misdiagnosed initially. This resulted in the needless exposure of one patient and two relatives to a toxic environment. The cherry-red color of the skin commonly cited in the literature was absent