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A 51-year-old man was admitted to the hospital because of the adult respiratory distress syndrome.
One week before admission, he began to have a dry cough, with myalgia and arthralgia. Three days later, he had shaking chills and coughed up yellow sputum. Two days before admission, the cough worsened, with the production of scanty sputum, a high temperature, and more chills. He sat upright because of dyspnea and had severe pain in the upper back. The day before admission to this hospital, he entered another hospital because of worsening dyspnea.
The patient was a businessman. Thirty years earlier he had
Differential Diagnosis
Clinical Diagnosis
Dr. John L. Brusch's Diagnoses
Pathological Discussion
Anatomical Diagnoses
References
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