Displaying publications 201 - 220 of 813 in total

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  1. Tai YS
    Med J Malaysia, 1986 Sep;41(3):233-5.
    PMID: 3670140
    A patient with marfanoid habitus was admitted to the General Hospital, Kuala Lumpur in October 1985 for surgical closure of an atrial septal defect. He was suspected to have Marfan Syndrome but there was no involvement of the aorta nor the eye. The clinical features were intermediate between that of the Marfan Syndrome and the Ehler's Danlos Syndrome. It is suggested that this could be a separate distinct entity within the heritable disorders of connective tissue known as the Marfanoid Hypermobility Syndrome.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  2. Krishnan MMS, Couper NTA
    Med J Malaysia, 1984 Jun;39(2):163-6.
    PMID: 6392840
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  3. Veerapen K, Ch'ng SL
    Med J Malaysia, 1987 Sep;42(3):217-8.
    PMID: 3509837
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  4. Goon HK, Mohd Bahari HM
    Med J Malaysia, 1983 Sep;38(3):200-2.
    PMID: 6672562
    Obturator hernia is a rare clinical entity usually presenting with strangulation. Preoperative diagnosis is seldom made and this has contributed to a high. mortality. One should suspect a strangulated obturator hernia in an elderly thin female patient presenting with vague abdominal symptoms or intestinal obstruction associated with a positive Howship-Romberg sign. Urgent laparotomy is indicated to establish the diagnosis and for resection of bowel if indicated.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  5. Chew PH, Leong LC, Ting PTM, Nath SK
    Med J Malaysia, 1982 Dec;37(4):365-9.
    PMID: 7167090
    The case notes of twelve jaundiced patients, on whom percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography (PTC) were performed, are reviewed. PTC was carried out to differentiate the patients with intrahepatic cholestasis from those with extrahepatic biliary obstruction, and to identify the site and nature of the block. In eleven cases, the biliary trees were visualised, with the sites of obstruction in those present demonstrated and confirmed at subsequent laparotomies. There was no serious side effect from the procedure. PTC in our hands has proved an invaluable aid in the investigation of the icteric patients.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  6. Omar A
    Med J Malaysia, 1982 Dec;37(4):362-4.
    PMID: 7167089
    A case of the Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) in Malaysia is described. A brief discussion of this rare condition and its differential diagnosis follows.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  7. Ng WH, Kew ST
    Med J Malaysia, 1980 Sep;35(1):41-5.
    PMID: 7253998
    Electrocardiographic features of the Woljf-Parkinson-White syndrome may be seen in normal individuals and in those with congenital or acquired heart disease. Predisposition to tachyarrhythmias and its misinterpretation are common. In this report a case of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome in a 25 year old Malay male who presented with cardiac arrhythmias is described. Echocardiographic findings and the role of echocardiography are discussed.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  8. Siar CH, Ng KH, Jalil NA
    Oral Surg. Oral Med. Oral Pathol., 1991 Jul;72(1):82-5.
    PMID: 1891247
    Plexiform granular cell odontogenic tumor of the mandible has recently been described. The cardinal histopathologic feature, as its name suggests, is a monophasic plexiform pattern of granular cells; the principal tumor in the differential diagnosis is granular cell ameloblastoma. Unlike the two previously reported cases of plexiform granular cell odontogenic tumor, which occurred as solid tumors in elderly men, the lesion reported here is a unicystic variant occurring in a middle-aged woman.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  9. Ramanathan M, Duraisamy G
    Med J Malaysia, 1987 Mar;42(1):53-5.
    PMID: 3431503
    We present three cases of Acquired Platelet Dysfunction with Eosinophilia (APDE). The importance of recognising this benign condition, which usually does not require any specific therapy, is stressed to avoid the pitfalls of diagnosing more serious bleeding disorders in children presenting with ecchymosis.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  10. Ramanathan M
    Med J Malaysia, 1987 Mar;42(1):65-7.
    PMID: 3431505
    This report deals with the problems of a young man who was clinically euthyroid but biochemically hyperthyroid. The possibility of peripheral resistance to thyroid hormones to explain this paradoxical state is discussed. The importance of recognising this condition to avoid the erroneous diagnosis of thyrotoxicosis and inappropriate therapy is stressed.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  11. Lee ST
    PMID: 2098927
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  12. Hamidon BB, Saadiah S
    Med J Malaysia, 2003 Dec;58(5):786-7.
    PMID: 15190673 MyJurnal
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  13. Ahluwalia HS, Kandiah S, Kaur H
    Med J Malaysia, 1977 Dec;32(2):172-4.
    PMID: 614488
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  14. Lim MA
    Med J Malaysia, 1974 Mar;28(3):171-5.
    PMID: 4278064
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  15. Morsy H, Mogensen M, Thomsen J, Thrane L, Andersen PE, Jemec GB
    Travel Med Infect Dis, 2007 Jul;5(4):243-6.
    PMID: 17574147
    Cutaneous larva migrans is a parasitic skin eruption caused by migration of larvae of various nematodes. Diagnosis of cutaneous larva migrans is currently based on the clinical signs of the creeping eruption. We are investigating a new diagnostic technology called optical coherence tomography (OCT) , which is potentially able to visualize structures in the skin with an 8 microm resolution. This technology could therefore potentially allow rapid, non-invasive, in vivo diagnosis of infestations.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  16. Thuraikumar K, Wan KL, Ong KL, Lim SW
    Malays Orthop J, 2020 Jul;14(2):141-144.
    PMID: 32983391 DOI: 10.5704/MOJ.2007.024
    Gouty arthritis commonly affects peripheral joints and is associated with hyperuricaemia. Spinal manifestations of gouty arthritis are not common, and majority of published articles worldwide were case reports. This is a case report of spinal gouty arthritis that presented with spinal vertebrae destruction and cauda equina syndrome. The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed destruction of L5/S1end plates with cystic collection mimicking infective changes. The tissue histological examination confirmed presence of urate crystal needles that displayed negative double refraction on light microscopy. Spinal gouty arthritis is part of the differential diagnoses in gouty arthritis patients.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  17. Joanne, T.S.Y., Lim, M.L., Asnawi, O., Shamsul, M.A.H., Khor, K.H.
    Jurnal Veterinar Malaysia, 2019;31(1):38-42.
    MyJurnal
    An 8-year-old spayed female Shih Tzu was referred to University Veterinary Hospital (UVH) with history of chronic coughing for more than a year duration. Dry, hacking cough was heard and bilateral wheezing lung sound was noted upon physical examination. Auscultation of heart revealed left apical systolic heart murmur Grade III/VI. A soft, intermittent swelling was observed at ventral neck, cranial to thoracic inlet (protruded upon expiration and collapsed upon inspiration). Thoracic radiography taken showed presence of apical radiolucency at cervical region and bronchial pattern at caudodorsal lungs with left atrium enlargement and right-sided heart enlargement. Echocardiographic examination revealed myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD) with mild regurgitation. Based on diagnostic imaging, this case was diagnosed as dynamic lung lobe herniation secondary to chronic coughing concurrent with myxomatous mitral valve disease. Other differential diagnosis that may lead to chronic cough such as of tracheal collapsed and bronchiectasis was not rule out.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  18. Salleh A, Zainuddin ZZ, Mohamed Tarmizi MR, Yap KC, Zamri-Saad M
    Vet Q, 2020 Dec;40(1):250-257.
    PMID: 33045934 DOI: 10.1080/01652176.2020.1836431
    Following its capture in March 2014, an adult female Sumatran rhinoceros frequently showed profuse vaginal bleeding. An ultrasonography suggested the presence of multiple reproductive lesions, including two uterine masses which were suspected to be leiomyomas. Soon after, an open pyometra was confirmed. Later in November 2019, the patient died and necropsy confirmed the presence of two uterine masses; one was located at the cervico-uterine junction and another in the uterine body, with pyometra, and cystic endometrial hyerplasia. Based on histological, special stains, and immunohistochemical examination, it was shown that one of the masses was composed of large, ovoid and polyhedral neoplastic mesenchymal cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and a few binucleated cells surrounded by collagen fibres. It was tested positive for SMA and vimentin, while negative for desmin, cytokeratin AE1/AE3, EMA, CD34, and S100. The other mass was composed of mesenchymal cells undergoing myxoid degeneration as evidenced by the presence of glycosaminoglycan-rich matrix. It was tested positive for SMA, vimentin, partially positive for desmin, and negative for the other markers. With the aid of human medical nomenclature, these masses were diagnosed as epithelioid leiomyoma and myxoid leiomyoma, respectively. This report provides a clinical presentation, and histologic descriptions of the two variants of leiomyomas that have not been reported in veterinary medicine.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  19. Hakim I, Yunus MRM
    Medeni Med J, 2020;35(3):271-275.
    PMID: 33110681 DOI: 10.5222/MMJ.2020.88120
    Histopathologically adult extracardiac rhabdomyoma is a benign tumour of mature striated muscle. It is a slow- growing tumour with predilection to occur in head and neck region. They appear mainly as a solitary lesion, and about 15% of them can be multicentric. A 56-year-old man presented to us with the floor of mouth swelling persisted for one year and the right neck swelling for three years mimicking a plunging ranula. Radiological imaging revealed enhancing mass at the floor of mouth and submandibular region. The mass represented a nonvascular benign tumour. Subsequently, the patient underwent excision of the mass via transcervical and transoral method. Histopathological examination revealed adult type of extracardiac rhabdomyoma. Adult type of extracardiac rhabdomyoma should be considered in the differential diagnosis for the head and neck masses. A complete excision will reduce the risk of recurrence.
    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
  20. James V, Samuel J, Kee CY, Ong GY
    Ultrasound J, 2020 Dec 03;12(1):51.
    PMID: 33270182 DOI: 10.1186/s13089-020-00199-y
    BACKGROUND: The presence of intra-abdominal calcification in the pediatric population can be due to a wide range of conditions. Calcification in the abdomen can be seen in normal or abnormal anatomical structures. In some patients, abnormal calcification points towards the pathology; whereas in others, calcification itself is the pathology. After a thorough history and clinical examination, point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) would complement the assessment of acute abdominal pain, based on the list of differentials generated as per the abdominal region. The main objective of this article is to review commonly encountered causes of intra-abdominal calcifications in the pediatric population and help in clinical decision-making in a Pediatric Emergency Department.

    CASE PRESENTATION: We describe a series of pediatric patients who presented to the Pediatric Emergency Department with acute abdominal pain, in whom point-of-care ultrasound helped expedite the diagnosis by identifying varying types of calcification and associated sonological findings. For children who present to the Pediatric Emergency Department with significant abdominal pain, a rapid distinction between emergencies and non-emergencies is vital to decrease morbidity and mortality.

    CONCLUSIONS: In a child presenting to the Pediatric Emergency Department with abdominal pain, POCUS and the findings of calcifications can narrow or expand the differential diagnosis when integrated with history and physical exam, to a specific anatomic structure. Integrating these findings with additional sonological findings of an underlying pathology might raise sufficient concerns in the emergency physicians to warrant further investigations for the patient in the form of a formal radiological ultrasound and assist in the patient's early disposition. The use of POCUS might also help to categorize the type of calcification to one of the four main categories of intra-abdominal calcifications, namely concretions, conduit wall calcification, cyst wall calcification, and solid mass-type calcification. POCUS used thoughtfully can give a diagnosis and expand differential diagnosis, reduce cognitive bias, and reduce physician mental load. By integrating the use of POCUS with the history and clinical findings, it will be possible to expedite the management in children who present to the Pediatric Emergency Department with acute abdominal pain.

    Matched MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential
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