1. Index of Suspicion * Case 1: Recurrent Oral Ulcers in an Adolescent * Case 2: Visual Impairment in an Autistic Child * Case 3: Fever and Hepatosplenomegaly in an Infant
- Author
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Moorthy Ln, Fine Hf, Patel R, Jain A, Jain Ak, Bruins B, and Milligan Tw
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Fever ,Vision Disorders ,Hepatosplenomegaly ,Physical examination ,Rapid plasma reagin ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Recurrence ,medicine ,Humans ,Autistic Disorder ,Feeding and Eating Disorders of Childhood ,Histoplasmosis ,Oral Ulcer ,Past medical history ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vitamin A Deficiency ,business.industry ,Behcet Syndrome ,Infant ,Hepatitis A ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,Rash ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Vulvitis ,Splenomegaly ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Headaches ,business ,Hepatomegaly - Abstract
A 16-year-old African American girl presents with extremely painful recurrent oral ulcers over the past 2 months. She reports similar painful ulcers of the genital area that have whitish discharge and intermittent low-grade fevers. A recent complaint of blurry vision prompted a visit to an ophthalmologist, who prescribed eye drops for “inflammation.” She denies sexual activity, drug use, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, headaches, rash, joint pains, cough, or frequent infections. Her past medical history is unremarkable, but an older brother has human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Physical examination reveals a well-developed adolescent girl in no acute distress. Her vital signs are within age-appropriate limits. She has several well-demarcated aphthous ulcers in her buccal mucosa and oval ulcers with whitish discharge over her labia majora. The remainder of the physical examination yields no findings of note. Laboratory testing reveals normal findings on a complete metabolic panel, urinalysis, and serum immunoglobulin and complement assessment. Her Hgb is 11.5 g/dL (115 g/L) and her ESR is elevated at 55 mm/hr. Serologic testing reveals negative titers for herpes simplex virus (HSV) types 1 and 2; HIV; cytomegalovirus; Toxoplasma ; and hepatitis A, B, and C. HSV cultures from ulcers as well as gonococcus and Chlamydia DNA and rapid plasma reagin tests are negative. Antinuclear and antidouble-stranded DNA antibodies are negative. However, a test for antiphospholipid antibodies is mildly positive to B2 glycoprotein. Biopsy results are consistent with vulvitis. A discussion with the patient's ophthalmologist confirms the clinical diagnosis and well-known complication. A 15-year-old Hispanic boy who has a previous diagnosis of autism presents to the ophthalmology clinic with a 2-month history of vision problems. His parents report that he does not walk around freely because he cannot see, he holds on to walls, and he runs into the furniture. He is no longer able to …
- Published
- 2010
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