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Clinical Problem-Solving
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Volume 357:2389-2393 December 6, 2007 Number 23
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The Leading Diagnosis — A 23-year-old black woman presented to the emergency department with diffuse, colicky abdominal pain of 1 hour's duration
Thomas E. Baudendistel, M.D., Amy K. Haase, M.D., and Faith Fitzgerald, M.D.

Since this article has no abstract, we have provided an extract of the first 100 words of the full text and any section headings.

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In this Journal feature, information about a real patient is presented in stages (boldface type) to an expert clinician, who responds to the information, sharing his or her reasoning with the reader (regular type). The authors' commentary follows.

A 23-year-old black woman presented to the emergency department with diffuse, colicky abdominal pain of 1 hour's duration. The pain was followed by nausea and episodes of bilious vomiting and did not radiate or change with the patient's position. She did not report fever, chills, diarrhea, hematochezia, or melena.

The differential diagnosis of acute abdominal pain in young adults is broad and . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Commentary


Source Information

From the Department of Medicine, California Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco (T.E.B., A.K.H.); and the Department of Medicine, University of California at Davis, Sacramento (F.F.).

Address reprint requests to Dr. Baudendistel at California Pacific Medical Center, 2351 Clay St., Suite 380, San Francisco, CA 94115 or at baudent@sutterhealth.org.




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