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Volume 340:972-973 March 25, 1999 Number 12
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Clinical Practice in Correctional Medicine

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Edited by Michael Puisis, with eight others. 375 pp. St. Louis, Mosby, 1998. $86. ISBN 0-8151-2704-9.

Not long after I started working at the prison in Walpole, Massachusetts, a patient came to my office during sick call and breezily announced that he had just swallowed 37 Tylenol tablets. He declined ipecac, stating almost as an afterthought, "Oh yeah, and I swallowed a razor." After we had administered acetylcysteine, a blood test failed to detect acetaminophen, but a radiograph showed the presence of a razor blade in his epigastrium and also a nail clipper, apparently in his rectum. A day or two later, the patient reported difficulty urinating, and my examination verified his claim that the nail . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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