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   general   >  publications   >  surgical-rounds   >  2007   >  2007-07   >  2007-07_14
 
 
Published Online: November 2, 2007 - 2:45:41 PM (CDT)

July Challenge: What's Your Best Diagnosis?




Maria Flynn, MD
GU Imaging Chief
Radiology Intern
Program Director
Department of Radiology
Naval Medical Center-
  Portsmouth
Portsmouth, VA

Aaron Gonzalez, DO
Transition Year Intern
Naval Medical Center-
  San Diego
San Diego, CA

Each month, Dr. Maria Flynn issues a Radiology Challenge, presenting images from one of a variety of imaging modalities and a case report. Can you diagnose the condition? Follow the link to find out whether your answer was correct, what was really wrong with the patient, and how the patient was treated. Then, come back next month to test your radiographic reading skills on a new case!

Dr. Maria Flynn is Chief of Genitourinary Imaging and Radiology Intern Program Director at the Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, as well as a Lieutenant Commander in the US Navy Medical Corps. She received her medical degree from Tulane Medical School in 1994 and completed her radiology residency at the National Capital Consortium in 2003. She is certified by the American Board of Radiology and has been appointed Adjunct Assistant Professor of Radiology and Radiological Sciences at the F. Edward Hébert School of Medicine.

Dr. Aaron Gonzalez is MS1 with the Naval Medical Center, San Diego, CA.

Case report
A 78-year-old African American man spent 22 days in the intensive care unit after undergoing a right hemicolectomy secondary to gastrointestinal bleeding. His surgery had been complicated by a small bowel obstruction and an incisional, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus wound infection. The patient was placed on vancomycin and piperacillin/tazobactam, but he continued to have an elevated white blood cell count of 18.3 x 1,000/UL (normal, 4.5-10.8 x 1,000/UL) and experienced increasing abdominal pain and distention. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) scans of the abdomen and pelvis were obtained, because of concern that he could have an intraperitoneal abscess (Figures 1 and 2). CT scans from a second patient, for whom findings were similar, are also shown (Figures 3 and 4).


Figure 1 Figure 2
Figure 3 Figure 4


Challenge: What's your best diagnosis?

  1. Pneumatosis intestinalis
  2. Small bowel obstruction
  3. Free intraperitoneal air
  4. Abscess


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