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A 47-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital because of intermittent abdominal pain, vomiting, and weight loss.
The patient had been well until six years earlier, when she began to experience intermittent bouts of crampy periumbilical pain radiating to the back. The episodes typically began after a meal but were sometimes unrelated to the intake of food; they lasted from a few minutes to several days but most often subsided after about four hours. Episodes of pain were accompanied by abdominal distention and vomiting of mucus and bile, with temporary constipation that often subsided with the passage of one or
Differential Diagnosis
Clinical Diagnosis
Dr. Alan W. Hackford's Diagnosis
Pathological Discussion
Anatomical Diagnosis
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References
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