13

Case 13


History



A 62-year-old gentleman is admitted for a chest infection. He has a past history of nasopharyngeal carcinoma and pulmonary tuberculosis. A chest computed tomography scan is performed. An incidental finding of a cystic pancreatic dilatation is noted. He denies any abdominal pain, weight loss or change in bowel habit.


Physical examination


Afebrile, pulse 80 bpm, BP 115/78mmHg, SaO2 96% on RA.


Hydration is satisfactory.


Examination of the hands reveals no clubbing and normal-appearing palmar creases.


Head and neck examination is unremarkable.


Cardiovascular: HS dual, no murmur.


His chest is clear on auscultation.


Abdominal examination reveals a soft, non-tender abdomen, with no definite mass palpable.


No signs of oedema.


Investigations


CBC:


WBC 5.8 x 109/L;


haemoglobin 11.8g/dL;


platelets 283 x 109/L.


ALP 138 IU/L.


ALT 16 IU/L.


Bilirubin 4μmol/L.


Amylase 81 IU/L.


CA 19.9 is 457 kIU/L (reference range is <18).


What would you do next?


A formal CT of the abdomen and pelvis with contrast (Figure 13.1).

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Oct 23, 2019 | Posted by in GASTROENTEROLOGY | Comments Off on 13

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