A 45-year-old previously well male truck driver presented to the emergency department with severe low back pain; lumbosacral X-ray was normal and he was given analgaesics and discharged. The following day, he presented to the emergency department again, his pain had not responded to the analgaesics; this time he also presented with massive bilateral swelling of lower limbs and left testicle that started 3 h earlier. The pain was severe, dull and interfered with the patient's ability to walk. An urgent workup revealed extensive thrombosis of the inferior vena cava.
A young man presented with a sudden onset of severe abdominal pain and vomiting. He also had shortness of breath with right-sided pleuritic chest pain. On examination he was found to have a rigid and diffusely tender abdomen. Auscultation of the chest revealed reduced air entry into the right lung. An erect chest X-ray confirmed the presence of pneumoperitoneum and a right-sided pneumothorax. He underwent placement of a right intercostal drain followed by urgent laparotomy. The intraoperative findings were consistent with a small duodenal perforation, which was managed by a simple omental patch closure. His postoperative course was uneventful. Pneumothorax is a rare complication of perforated duodenal ulcer and should be kept in mind while assessing patients who present with abdominal pain and dyspnoea. We have discussed various possibilities that should be considered in patients who present with a concomitant pneumothorax and pneumoperitoneum.
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