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Figure 1. A 54-year-old man presented with severe pain in the right side of the groin that radiated to the calf and anteromedial thigh of the right leg, causing him to lie with his hips flexed. Hip extension exacerbated the pain. Because of venous thrombosis of the legs, he had received warfarin for the previous 10 months. There was a palpable mass in the right side of the groin. Neurologic examination revealed weakness of the right quadriceps muscle and thigh adductors and a depressed knee jerk and loss of sensation on the anteromedial thigh and in the territory of . . . [Full Text of this Article] |