Diagnosis requires seeing patient problems with a wide lens

Susan Sorensen, FACP, an internist and hematologist in Palo Alto, Calif., told us of a case where the correct diagnosis took more than a year to make. The patient was a 24-year-old woman who had developed weight loss, fatigue and intermittent chest tightness. She was seen in a local emergency department, and was told that she should consult a pulmonary specialist. A chest X-ray and EKG appeared normal.

Over the next few months, she continued to feel unwell, losing more weight and developing a new symptom, intermittent abdominal pain, predominantly in her left lower quadrant. She was seen again in the emergency department, and received a diagnosis of possible urinary tract infection. A course of antibiotics did not improve her symptoms. She returned to the emergency department during a bout of abdominal pain, and was referred to a gynecologist. A pelvic ultrasound was unremarkable, and she was prescribed a second course of antibiotics for possible pelvic inflammatory disease.

She did not improve after this second empiric regimen of antibiotics, and continued to experience intermittent symptoms of abdominal pain, mostly in the left lower quadrant, with frequent bowel movements but no diarrhea. She lost an additional 10 pounds, and noted early satiety. After another visit to the emergency department, she was referred to a gastroenterologist, who evaluated her for celiac disease and tested her for food allergies; all tests were negative. The gastroenterologist performed an upper endoscopy, which was unremarkable.

Her symptoms persisted and she developed drenching night sweats and excruciating headaches, which prompted another visit to the emergency department. Neurological evaluation, including an MRI scan of the head and an EEG, were negative. She was given the diagnosis of possible abdominal migraine. An endocrine evaluation yielded a normal corticotropin stimulation test. A bout of severe nausea brought her once again to the emergency department and she was treated with ondansetron (Zofran). The emergency department physician noted cervical lymphadenopathy and she was referred for a lymph node aspiration, which yielded only adipose tissue. A workup for a possible occult malignancy, including a CT scan of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis, was negative, although sclerosis of the sacroiliac joints was noted. Lacking a diagnosis, a house officer told her, “You need to eat more.”

An internist steps in

After more than six visits to the emergency department and evaluations by multiple specialists, the patient was referred to Dr. Sorensen.

The first thing the woman said was, “I am afraid I’m wasting your time. I am not having any pain right now.” Dr. Sorensen realized that the patient thought it was only appropriate to seek help for her symptoms when she was having an acute episode. Each time she received care in an emergency department, and then was referred to a different specialist. Her symptoms had now been present for almost a year, and included drenching night sweats, bowel movements after each meal, nausea, anorexia and abdominal pain that was intermittent and most prominent in the left lower quadrant.

On further questioning, she reported left hip stiffness and right knee pain. Her medical history was significant for seronegative juvenile rheumatoid arthritis as a child, which had resolved at puberty. A 17-year-old cousin had recently been diagnosed with Crohn’s disease.

On physical exam, her body mass index was 16.8. There was mild tenderness in the left lower quadrant and, on pelvic examination, tenderness in the left adnexa. Her left sacroiliac joint was quite tender to palpation. Additional laboratory testing included negative antinuclear antibody panel and negative stool cultures. Dr Sorensen reviewed all of the patient’s previous scans and confirmed the presence of sacroiliitis. Her human leukocyte antigen B27 was negative.

Dr. Sorensen suspected a diagnosis of Crohn’s disease, and this was confirmed with lower endoscopy and biopsy of the terminal ileum. The patient was treated with mesalamine with improvement of her symptoms.

Through a lens, narrowly

As we heard this case, we were reminded of the parable of the blind men and the elephant. There are versions of this tale in many cultures, each slightly different, but the most famous one is the Hindi version popularized by John Godfrey Saxe in his poem. A group of blind men touch an elephant to determine what it is like. Each one touches only one part of the elephant, and they then can’t agree. In the case of this young woman, each specialist viewed the patient’s symptoms in the context of his or her own specialty.

Each saw the patient’s problems through a narrow lens, and demonstrated a mix of anchoring and availability. Anchoring is seizing upon the first bit of information that you encounter, analogous to grasping the elephant’s tail or its tusk or its leg. Availability is calling up what is most familiar or dramatic in past encounters, and understandably, specialists think about diagnoses within their own field, because they are most experienced with these disorders and they consider them first. Indeed, as the case unfolded, each of us immediately thought of diagnoses in our own disciplines: malignancy as an oncologist (Dr. Groopman), adrenal insufficiency or hyperthyroidism as an endocrinologist (Dr. Hartzband).

It is particularly the role of the internist to consider the disparate fragments of the patient’s history, examination and evaluation and knit these pieces together to arrive at the correct diagnosis, mindful that each isolated part of the “elephant” must be combined with the others to yield the correct form.

Jerome Groopman, a hematologist-oncologist and endocrinologist, and Pamela Hartzband are staff physicians at Boston’s Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. They are authors of Your Medical Mind: How to Decide What Is Right for You. This article was originally published in ACP Internist.

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  • Poison Poppies

    I had a similar experience…but i don’t have a diagnosis. I found my primary care doctor ineffective. I often could not get an appointment when I was sick and he dismissed my symptoms when I sat in front of him feeling ok. He dismissed my fatigue as depression, told me that I should walk instead of run and drink Carnation Instant Breakfast for the weight loss. His EMR has no check box for my disease and so it doesn’t exist.

    Although the specialist I saw didn’t come up with a diagnosis, they did consider me a whole person. I often got care that should have been in my primary’s realm-consideration of my quality of life.

    This case is anecdotal, just like mine. I have since left that primary care physician, and have found the same dynamic elsewhere. With 10 minute appointments, physicians assistants taking urgent appointments, I don’t get the care that I need. I have learned to live with it…I don’t even bring up symptoms anymore.

  • hla-b27 ish

    Funny. Crohn’s was the first thing that popped into my head, and stayed there when the biopsy eventually done was not noted in her earlier workups. I’m still a blind guy feeling the elephant though… My lens is that of someone with ankylosing spondylitis – I run the possibilities against the pack of diseases/syndromes that are similar or linked.

  • r watkins

    And, of course, the internist was paid much, much less than anyother doc involved in the patient’s care.

  • Doc99

    As the former Chairman of Medicine at Tulane, Dr. George E. Burch, would have said, “This patient didn’t need a pulmonologist, an oncologist, or a gynecologist. This patient needed a doctor.”

    • Michael Rack, MD

      Or a good gastroenterologist.

      Sounds like the gastroenterologist on this case blew it.

  • The 50 Best Health Blogs

    As a patient, I’ve had similar experiences.

    I often have discomfort in my upper left chest and in my left arm after eating. I suspect a heart problem, but some health professionals have suggested a digestive problem.

    I have sometimes had EKGs done during these episodes, with no problems found. I am scheduled to have a heart stress test soon by a cardiologist, who will probably want to do a coronary artery stent.

    Jim Purdy

  • DJ

    The mystique of the specialist, although a necessity in anything as complex as medicine, combined with the outpatient primary care ‘factory model of the assembly line’ approach to pt care has unfortunately brought with it a type of, well, frankly…. idiocy.

    I’m afraid the way medicine is praticed is entirely unsuited to what medical care is really all about. The basic problem is that it was modeled on an industrial capitalist, factory-type philosophy, which developed out of the industrial period in history….no doubt useful in dealing with commodities in the chain of selling and buying a manufactured product, but wholly unsuited as a philosophy upon which to base the medical care of a feeling human being with a complex personality.

    The stupidity of it is astonishing.

    I’m afraid the whole thing has to be restructured from the ground up, if you ever want to really solve these types of problems.

  • Dr. Pi

    I had left thigh pain for 18 months, saw 5 specialists, even had knee arthroscopy. Then the Big Clinic one day “misplaced” my chart. No EMR in those days. The sleep specialist (I couldn’t sleep because of the pain) who I was ultimately referred to (MD#5) said, “Catch me up. I don’t have your chart. Start from the beginning.” An MRI of my lumbar spine (I never,ever had back pain) revealed a huge extruded disc and a synovial cyst –you guessed it. Surgery 100% successful –although a fusion was necessary to stabilize my vertebral joint. So you’re right–sometimes specialists miss the big picture–I’ll always be grateful for that missing chart.

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