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Postgrad Med J 2001;77:602-603 ( September )

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Abdominal pain after trauma in a young man

B L Samaga, M V Nagaraj

Department of Clinical Medicine, Kasturba Medical College, Manipal, Karnataka, India

Correspondence to: Dr B L Samaga, KMC Qtrs 135, Manipal Udipi, Karnataka, PIN 576119, India bl_samaga@yahoo.com

Submitted 5 November 1999; Accepted 11 May 2000

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

A 27 year old man presented with vague abdominal pain two weeks after trauma to the abdomen by a cricket ball. The pain was felt in the right lower quadrant with an intermittent increase in severity. There were no systemic or other gastrointestinal symptoms. On physical examination there was a firm, non-tender mass in the right lumbar region. The mass was not mobile, not ballottable. Abdominal sonography showed hypoechoic mass lesion on both sides of the spine, extending from the lumbar region up to the pelvis. His complete haemogram (haemoglobin, total leucocyte count, differential leucocyte count, platelet count), serum glucose, renal and liver function tests, chest radiograph, and electrocardiogram were normal; his erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 60 mm/hour.

Computed tomography of the abdomen (figs 1 and 2) showed bilateral, rounded, hypoattenuated, and fluid dense mass lesions (rim enhancing on contrast) within the psoas muscle sheath, extending from lumbar region up to . . . [Full text of this article]







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