Clinical Review

Woman, 66, With Persistent Abdominal and Back Pain

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A 66-year-old Latin American woman presented to the emergency department (ED) with persistent abdominal and back pain of about one month’s duration. She had visited another ED eight days earlier for similar symptoms and was discharged home with a mild opioid pain medication and a proton pump inhibitor. However, she said that she had received neither a diagnosis nor an explanation for her symptoms.

Medical history, obtained with the assistance of an interpreter because the patient was not fluent in English, included hypertension, coronary artery disease, and hyperlipidemia; these had gone untreated for at least two years. She denied any personal or family history of cancer or endocrine disorders. Surgical history included a cholecystectomy and a percutaneous coronary intervention for an unknown coronary artery lesion.

She had a 14-pack-year history of cigarette smoking. Her medications included only ibuprofen and hydrocodone, and she had no known drug allergies. The patient denied use of herbal preparations or vitamin supplements and unusual dietary practices.

Review of systems revealed occasional dizziness, constipation, decreased appetite, and some mild confusion noted by family members, but no fever, chills, palpitations, chest pain, shortness of breath, muscle spasm, or weakness. Vital signs were normal. Physical examination was remarkable for tenderness of the upper quadrants of the abdomen with deep palpation, without guarding or rebound. Bony tenderness at the right anterior costal margin of the rib cage was also noted.

Laboratory work-up revealed marked hypercalcemia (15.4 mg/dL), electrolyte abnormalities, anemia, impaired renal function, and elevated alkaline phosphatase and globulin levels (see Table 1). In addition, a plain abdominal x-ray series was negative for acute findings, but x-rays of the right ribs revealed a fracture of the sixth rib and osteopenia.

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