Affiliation:
1. ENT Department, St George’s University Hospital, London SW17 0QT, UK
Abstract
Abstract
Acute pancreatitis may present with a myriad of clinical and radiological manifestations. Assessment of the severity and prognosis of the disease is often based on clinical features, laboratory analysis and computer tomography (CT) scans; however, the predictive value of CT is not 100% accurate. We report herein a case with an especially rare sequence of clinical events, manifesting as a septic fluid collection within the inguinal canal that was misdiagnosed as an inguinal hernia on CT imaging. The patient underwent surgical drainage and an orchidectomy to treat the infection. This case illustrates the complexity and severity of acute pancreatitis as well as the challenges in interpreting and relying on diagnostic radiological data.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Reference10 articles.
1. Diagnosis and management of acute pancreatitis and its complications;Dupuis;Gastrointest Intervention,2013
2. Necrotising pancreatitis presenting as a painful mass in the groin and sepsis;O'Sullivan;BMJ Case Rep,2013
3. Serum amylase and lipase in the evaluation of acute abdominal pain;Chase;Am Surg,1996
4. Comparison of Ranson, Glasgow, MOSS, SIRS, BISAP, APACHE-II, CTSI scores, IL-6, CRP, and Procalcitonin in predicting severity, organ failure, pancreatic necrosis, and mortality in acute pancreatitis;Khanna;HPB Surg,2013
5. Vasitis: clinical and ultrasound confusion with inguinal hernia clarified by computed tomography;Eddy;Can Urol Assoc J,2011