Conclusions
 
Symptoms & History

Physical Findings

Stop & Think

Lab and X-Ray

Differential Diagnosis

The Disease

Treatment

Conclusions

Quiz & Evaluation
 

What was the point of this exercise?

The practice of medicine
  • The patient history is the single most important tool in making a diagnosis.
  • Sensible use of the laboratory, X-Ray or special procedures relies on patient history and physical exam.
This case in particular
  • AIDS can present in many ways. An unresolved pneumonia is very common.
  • Interpreting HIV tests can be tricky. A positive ELISA must be confirmed by a more a sensitive test.
  • AIDS is a clinical syndrome with three distinct stages, not simply HIV positivity.

Continue                 Back

 

 

Main Index | Slide Table of Contents | Case Studies Table of Contents