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Imagine you're in the ED, and a previously mobile 55-year-old male arrives with sudden, severe leg weakness, worsening back pain, and fecal incontinence. Alarming, right? This is more than a typical sciatica flare. As the team dives deeper, they uncover a medical maze—chronic vascular disease, prior urinary issues, new neurological deficits, and even a possible Guillain-Barré or neurosarcoidosis diagnosis on the table. With imaging revealing everything from spinal neuroforaminal narrowing to bilateral avascular necrosis and labs pointing to a urinary tract infection, this case demands clinical curiosity, multidisciplinary collaboration, and a whole-lot of critical thinking.
Key Topics for Clinical Learning:
Differential Diagnosis of Sudden Neurologic Decline
→ How to evaluate lower extremity weakness with incontinence: spinal vs. autoimmune vs. infectious.
Imaging Insights
→ MRI findings: Cervical to lumbar narrowing, femoral head necrosis, and how they connect (or don’t) to the clinical picture.
Infectious Complications
→ Urinary tract infection or red herring? When to dig deeper.
Labs & Pharmacology
→ Interpreting lab trends in complex cases and managing polypharmacy across neurology, vascular, and infectious disease concerns.
Multidisciplinary Collaboration
→ Navigating consults between neurology, infectious disease, orthopedics, and internal medicine.
Imagine you're in the ED, and a previously mobile 55-year-old male arrives with sudden, severe leg weakness, worsening back pain, and fecal incontinence. Alarming, right? This is more than a typical sciatica flare. As the team dives deeper, they uncover a medical maze—chronic vascular disease, prior urinary issues, new neurological deficits, and even a possible Guillain-Barré or neurosarcoidosis diagnosis on the table. With imaging revealing everything from spinal neuroforaminal narrowing to bilateral avascular necrosis and labs pointing to a urinary tract infection, this case demands clinical curiosity, multidisciplinary collaboration, and a whole-lot of critical thinking.
Key Topics for Clinical Learning:
Differential Diagnosis of Sudden Neurologic Decline
→ How to evaluate lower extremity weakness with incontinence: spinal vs. autoimmune vs. infectious.
Imaging Insights
→ MRI findings: Cervical to lumbar narrowing, femoral head necrosis, and how they connect (or don’t) to the clinical picture.
Infectious Complications
→ Urinary tract infection or red herring? When to dig deeper.
Labs & Pharmacology
→ Interpreting lab trends in complex cases and managing polypharmacy across neurology, vascular, and infectious disease concerns.
Multidisciplinary Collaboration
→ Navigating consults between neurology, infectious disease, orthopedics, and internal medicine.