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splenic infarction/fever

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Lessons learned from splenic infarcts with fever of unknown origin (FUO): culture-negative endocarditis (CNE) or malignancy?

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Culture negative endocarditis (CNE) is a common concern in patients with fever, heart murmur, cardiac vegetation, and negative blood cultures. The diagnosis of CNE is not based only on negative blood cultures and a cardiac vegetation. The clinical definition of CNE is based on negative blood

Q Fever with transient antiphospholipid antibodies associated with cholecystitis and splenic infarction.

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We describe a case of Q fever associated with the transient presence of antiphospholipid antibodies in a 9-year-old boy presenting with acalculous cholecystitis and splenic infarction. Antiphospholipid antibodies are commonly associated with acute Q fever in adults but have previously been thought

Case records of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Weekly clinicopathological exercises. Case 18-1989. A 52-year-old woman with left-lower-quadrant abdominal pain, fever, and splenic infarcts.

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A 45-year-old woman with fever and splenic infarcts.

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[Splenic infarctions: an uncommon cause of fever].

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Q-fever associated with splenic infarction and an anti-cardiolipin antibody.

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An 85-Year-Old Man With Recurrent Fever and Multiple Splenic Infarcts.

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A 53-year-old female with a 3- to 4-month history of fever, night sweats, lethargy, anorexia, splenic infarction, and worsening mitral valve prolapse.

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[Splenic infarct revealing paratyphoid fever in a child].

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[The value of a standardized ultrasound in patients with fever].

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OBJECTIVE Transcutaneous ultrasound is not a common imaging procedure in patients with fever. The aim of this study is to demonstrate the diagnostic value of a complete standardized ultrasound examination of patients with fever. METHODS From March 2003 to October 2003, we examined 200 patients with

Case report: splenic infarction and acute splenic sequestration in adults with hemoglobin SC disease.

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While acute splenic sequestration and splenic infarction are commonly observed in infants and young children with sickle cell anemia, they are rarely experienced by adult hemoglobin S homozygotes because the recurrent splenic infarction that takes place during childhood is typically followed by

[Lymphoma-induced antiphospholipid syndrome as a cause of splenic infarction].

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METHODS A 71-year-old man presented with bilateral sialadenosis of the parotid gland, episodes of fever up to 39 °C, general malaise and weight loss of 5 kg within the last 6 weeks. At physical examination peripheral lymph nodes were not palpable. METHODS Laboratory studies revealed a normal white

Splenic infarction complicated with immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome due to disseminated Mycobacterium genavense infection in a patient infected with human immunodeficiency virus.

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Mycobacterium genavense (M. genavense) is one of the most fastidious, difficult to culture Mycobacterium species. Patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) may develop immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) due to disseminated M. genavense infection as well as

[Splenic Infarctions Caused by Acute Cytomegalovirus Infection: A Case Report].

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We report a 48-year-old healthy man who presented with a 1-week history of fever and epigastric pain. He had traveled to Indonesia and had been in sexual contact with a local woman 4 weeks prior to admission. His peripheral blood film showed atypical reactive lymphocytes. A serological test for

Splenic infarction during acute malaria.

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Malaria is the most frequent cause of fever among travellers returning from tropical countries. Each year about 7000 cases are notified in France, of which 90% are due to Plasmodium falciparum. We describe the case of a Caucasian female patient with no previous exposure to malaria in whom splenic
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