Boletín de la Asociación Médica de Puerto Rico
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Review Case Reports
An unusual cause of muscle weakness: a diagnostic challenge.
We report a case of 24 year-old-female presenting with bilateral leg heaviness sensation and difficult walking of one-day duration. Over the past three months she developed progressive and frequent tingling sensation on her hands accompanied by headache and increased thirst. Hypokalemia was identified and treated with resolution of symptoms. ⋯ The pathogenesis is uncertain. Because the condition is rare, it is frequently overlooked and misdiagnosed on presentation. It is important to recognize these clinical settings in hypokalemic patients in order to promptly start adequate medical therapy and avoid the lethal complications caused by prolonged sustained potassium depletion.
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This is a case of 49 year-old-female with left lower quadrant pain. Initial diagnosis of acute diverticulitis entertained and treated accordingly. ⋯ Epiploic appendagitis is commonly misdiagnosed as diverticulitis and appendicitis. Non-invasive studies may lead to early diagnosis avoiding unnecessary hospitalizations, antibiotic therapy and surgical intervention.
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This is a case of a 34 years old male Hispanic patient with history of AIDS who presented to the ER with severe right lower quadrant abdominal pain of three days of evolution, associated with fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, watery diarrhea, weakness and general malaise. Acute appendicitis, Clostridium Difficile Colitis and Ischemic Colitis were the most important clinical conditions to consider in the differential diagnosis. Abdominal CT with IV contrast demonstrated thickening of the ascending colonic wall a finding highly suggestive of a transmural inflammatory necrotizing colitis of infectious etiology. ⋯ It is important to include it in the differential diagnosis of an HIV/AIDS patient that presents with RLQ pain and fever. Contrast enhanced CT-Scan is mandatory to establish the diagnosis and to differentiate typhlitis from other intra-abdominal pathologies. Therapy needs to be individualized.