Oxf Med Case Reports
December 2023
Bariatric surgery is a well-established treatment for morbid obesity, combining both restrictive and malabsorptive mechanisms to achieve weight loss. Macro and micronutrient deficiencies are some of the most common complications of these operations, which in rare occasions can be unexpected, severe, and difficult to manage. We present a case of severe copper deficiency related myelopathy in a patient post single anastomosis gastric bypass, requiring parenteral copper replacement and eventual reversal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRupture of a liver haemangioma is extremely rare, with less than 100 cases reported in the literature. This is the first case known to date reporting a rupture occurring with direct oral anticoagulant therapy. A 76-year-old woman presented with acute abdominal pain and syncope in the context of commencing apixaban 4 weeks prior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Internal abdominal hernias account for 1% of all hernias but 5.8% of all bowel obstructions and hence are of significant clinical importance. Similarly Spigelian hernias account for only 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlast Reconstr Surg Glob Open
April 2015
Neurological involvement is not uncommon in patients who sustain electrical injury. The exact mechanism of nervous system damage following electrical trauma is not fully understood. The gamut of possible neurologic manifestations following electrical injury is diverse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF80-year-old female presented with clinical findings suggestive of acute cholecystitis. Intraoperatively we discovered a dusky gallbladder with gangrenous patches and gallbladder torsion with 270 degrees clockwise rotation along the longitudinal axis. Gallbladder torsion is a rare cause of acute cholecystitis with less than 500 cases published in the literature.
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