J Natl Med Assoc
-
Case Reports
It's the Bloody Gallbladder! Spontaneous Gallbladder Hemorrhage Following Factor Xa Inhibition.
Spontaneous gallbladder hemorrhage (SGBH) is a rare diagnosis related to trauma, malignancy or vascular abnormalities, associated with significant morbidity and mortality. We present a case of SGBH in a 55-year-old patient with right upper quadrant (RUQ) pain following initiation of apixaban for deep vein thrombosis post recent kidney transplant. ⋯ Surgery revealed a gallbladder with chronic cholecystitis, hemorrhage and hematoma. This case highlights a rare adverse event of anticoagulation, and SGBH should be considered when acute RUQ pain occurs in this setting.
-
Clinical inertia remains a persistent problem in the treatment of diabetes in clinical care. Primary care provider behavior is thought to be a significant contributor to diabetes clinical inertia. This study used the lens of Critical Race Theory to examine whether provider's diabetes management activities differ by patient race and frame implications for future research. ⋯ Study findings showed an association between provider diabetes management behaviors and patient race, Future studies showed explore providers' racial beliefs, attitudes and clinical decision-making, and patients' experiences with historical exclusion from medical care and racism in healthcare encounters In addition, more research is needed to explore the role of structural racism in clinical inertia.
-
Multiple Myeloma (MM) is a neoplastic disorder derived from the malignant proliferation of monoclonal plasma cells. It is characterized by the overproduction of immunoglobulins (Ig). We report a rare case in which bulbar palsy was the initial manifestation of IgG-MM. ⋯ Therefore, the patient began to receive the chemotherapy with PAD (bortezomib-doxorubicin-dexamethasone) regimen. Her condition had been under control. MM as a hematological malignancy can affect cranial nerves and present as chronic progressive bulbar palsy.