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A 39-year-old man was admitted to this hospital because of chest pain, arthralgias, and a mediastinal mass.
Two months before admission, pain in the middle and right chest developed, which radiated intermittently to the right arm, increased in intensity with deep inspiration or changes in position, and was accompanied by fatigue and mild shortness of breath; there was no wheezing, cough, or production of sputum. He came to the emergency department of this hospital.
He had been admitted to this hospital approximately 1 year earlier because of similar symptoms associated with diffuse arthralgias; an electrocardiogram at that time showed a
Differential Diagnosis
Mediastinal Mass
Tumors
Infection
Systemic Inflammatory Diseases
Arthritis
Optic Neuritis
Other Extrathoracic Organ System Disease
Glucocorticoid Use
Positive Test for Anca
Summary
Clinical Diagnosis
Dr. Peter A. Merkel's Diagnosis
Pathological Discussion
Anatomical Diagnosis
Source Information
From the Arthritis Center, Boston Medical Center, and the Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine (P.A.M.); the Cardiology Division (D.M.) and the Departments of Radiology (A.S.) and Pathology (J.R.S.), Massachusetts General Hospital; and the Departments of Medicine (D.M.), Radiology (A.S.), and Pathology (J.R.S.), Harvard Medical School — all in Boston.
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