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A baby is irritable, has trouble nursing and stops gaining weight. When the infant begins suffering repeated seizures and eventually begins sustaining rapid-onset cerebral ischemia, they are diagnosed with moyamoya disease, and must be treated before they suffer lethal brain damage from the repeated ischemic incidents.
Keep reading to explore these extraordinary medical cases that showcase the weird, wonderful, and awe-inspiring side of medicine! #1 Facial Reconstruction During World War I (1916-1917) [colorized ...
Each episode focuses on two or more individuals who have struggled with obscure medical ailments, and their quest for a diagnosis. The program details the patients' and doctors' difficulty in pinpointing a diagnosis; often due to nonspecific symptoms, masquerading syndromes, the rarity of the condition or disease, or the patient's case being an ...
The column would highlight medical mysteries that she would encounter with her own patients and those of her colleagues. She described the cases as mysteries, revealing the diagnosis in the following week's column. [4] The column was adapted for the 2004 TV series House M.D., for which Sanders served as a medical consultant for the show.
Using intriguing, real-life medical cases, the specialists grapple with diagnosis and treatment options to give viewers the most up-to-date, accurate medical information. The series is produced for public television by WXXI-TV , the University of Rochester Medical Center and West 175 Productions.
NBC wants to spend a little more time at St. Denis Medical. The network has ordered five more episodes of the upcoming hospital comedy, TVLine has confirmed, bringing the total Season 1 episode ...
NBC has given a five-episode back order to the upcoming hospital mockumentary “St. Denis Medical,” bringing its first season to a total of 18 episodes. Per the official logline, the single-cam ...
The show's fourth Christmas-themed episode, and the second episode of the series that looks back at three past cases, including: a baby girl whose brain was infected with Cytomegalovirus in utero ("All I Got For Christmas Is Brain Surgery"); a woman whose eye is infected with the worm Dirofilaria immitis ("A Holiday in the Hospital"); and a man ...