Medical Mystery Solved – The Road Less Traveled | NEJM

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This Double Take video from the New England Journal of Medicine presents the
real-life case of a woman with progressive chest pain after a trip to Puerto
Rico, where she spent time exploring local national parks and caves. Viewers
are guided through the differential diagnosis of the patient’s presentation and
how it evolves with the diagnostic evaluation, culminating in the patient’s final
diagnosis and clinical course.


The New England Journal of Medicine is the world’s leading general medical
journal. Continuously published for over 200 years, NEJM publishes
peer-reviewed research along with interactive clinical content for physicians,
educators, and the global medical community at NEJM.org.

#medicaleducation #clinicalmedicine #nejm #doubletake #interactivemedicalcase #diagnosticevaluation #emergencymedicine #differentialdiagnosis
Комментарии
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As soon as they mentioned she was in a cave I knew that was going to be the key to the diagnosis 😄

mattcool
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The visuals were amazing and loved the morning report style approach 👏🏽

kemarbarrett
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Just wonderful! We need more of these!

narek
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Feels like a dr house episode without the drama, i am loving these❤❤

sabyasachidas
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Thank you very much for the video. In my opinion, with the presence of acute pleuritic chest pain with tachycardia, even in the absence of elevated D-dimer, a CT pulmonary angiogram is essential for diagnosis if resource is available. Without the CT, the subtle lung shadow and lymphadenopathy cannot be detected.

thomasli
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7:48 Physicians should ask for a thorough exposure history right off the Bat. No pun intended

TimothyPark-yuht
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IDK. Look at the CT scan. "Mediastinal and hilar lymphadenopathy" seems to be too simple to describe those mediastinal and hilar lesions, to my eyes. They are not that nodular, they are rather diffusely infiltrative. And those lesions are obliterating normal mediastinal fat planes. It could be just "lymphadenitis", but I would probably suspect more than just simple "lymphadenopathy" if I see this kind of lesions. For example, I would probably include fibrosing mediastinitis (possible complication of various causes including histiplasmosis, IgG4-related disease, and tuberculosis) as my DDx, although it is a less likely diagnosis considering its low incidence.

wowhimin
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Viva a medicina ! Viva o conhecimento livre e gratuito !

jorgeescalante
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Em português ou castelhano por gentileza...😊🙏🙏🙏🙏

rosangeladilorenzobello
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It seems like this video might have been made with the help of ChatGPT or a similar AI tool

marcossouzadias
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