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Journal of Diabetes Research Review & Reports

Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever Presenting with Acute Abdomen in a Non- Government Tertiary Care Hospital in Bangladesh

Author(s): Shah TA*, Matin MF, Rubaiya NM, Allin TD and Arif SM

A 60-year-old diabetic and hypertensive post-menopausal lady, presented at a tertiary care Hospital in Dhaka, Bangladesh with severe abdominal pain in the right middle and lower abdomen, associated with oliguria for 1 day. She also gave history of having high grade fever and headache for 3 days, which subsided 2 days ago.

On examination, she was afebrile, mildly dehydrated, tachycardic (PR- 110/min), hypotensive (BP- 90/60 mm Hg), Tourniquet Test was positive. Her abdomen was tense and diffusely tender, especially in the right middle and lower parts, bowel sound was present, no organomegaly or lump was found.

S. Lipase was normal, Anti-dengue Antibody IgM and IgG were positive, CBC revealed Hemoglobin – 8.6 gm/dL, Hematocrit was raised- 52%, Platelet count was 16000/ microliter, Stool for OBT was negative, RBS- 16 mmol/L and Urine RME and ketone bodies was negative.

A provisional diagnosis of Dengue Hemorrhagic fever with suspected intra- abdominal bleeding was made and she was shifted to ICU.

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