4 research outputs found

    Extensive injuries following a ‘trip at home’: a case report

    Get PDF
    A 52-year-old, Caucasian, British man suffered significant injury following simple fall. A man with no significant past medical history, presented to the accident and emergency with right side chest pain and shortness of breath. He reported a simple fall, two days before admission. Chest radiograph showed simple bilateral pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum. Subsequent computerised tomography confirmed the thoracic injury and identified complex pathophysiology as described. This case shows the extent of injury a person can sustain from a simple fall and the high index of suspicion required to discover the full extent of a patient's injuries. We review the literature to find other forms of presentation

    Paediatric Boerhaave’s syndrome: a case report and review of the literature

    Get PDF
    We report a case of paediatric Boerhaave’s syndrome in 15-year-old girl associated with massive dilatation of the stomach into the pelvis and transient hepatitis of uncertain aetiology. This cluster of clinical finding has not previously been reported. The young girl initially presented with abdominal pain, vomiting and lower urinary tract symptoms. She was initially treated for urinary tract infection after urine dipstick showed leucocytes and nitrates. Later she was found to have the spectrum of findings as described. Patient was treated by restricting to strict no oral intake and gastric decompression. Enteral nutrition maintained via a feeding jejunostomy

    A novel technique for the treatment of post operative retro-rectal haematoma: two case reports

    Get PDF
    Rectal bleeding following any form of rectal surgery is a well recognised complication 1, 2, 3 & 4. However retro-rectal bleeding and tracking which then presents as rectal bleeding has not been reported in the literature. We describe a novel way of dealing with this technically difficult post-operative complication

    Case report and magnetic resonance images of sclerosing angiomatoid nodular transformation (SANT) of the spleen

    Full text link
    A 40-year-old woman presented with a 2 year history of intermittent left upper quadrant pain. The clinical examination and blood tests were normal, but the pain persisted. An ultrasound scan of the abdomen revealed a hypoechoic mass in the spleen which was further investigated by computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The differential diagnosis included solitary lymphoma, splenic haematoma, sarcoma, solitary metastasis or partially thrombosed splenic artery aneurysm. The patient underwent elective splenectomy and histology showed the appearance of a rare tumour. We present MRI images of this very rare splenic tumour
    corecore