A 69-year-old male patient came to the emergency room after 22h with severe, oppressive lower abdominal pain, nausea, fever and dysuria, no vomits and hematochezia. Patient referred no important illness or risk factor. At physical examination the patient was alert, oriented in time, space and person. At the abdominal exam, the patient referred pain at the deep palpation of the right iliac region, no signs of lower gastrointestinal bleeding. Rest of the exam with no contributions. A diagnosis of abdominal pain syndrome was stated, suggesting urolithiasis or benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) as the possible causes. Patient received nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) by intramuscular injections (IM) and NSAIDs capsules. The patient got better and left the hospital. However, one week later the patient returned to the internal medicine unit with a tomography that suggested right diverticulitis, and for that reason he was referred to the gastroenterology department for colonoscopy. The test showed a subpediculated polyp of 20mm on the ileocecal valve. (A, B) The polyp was extracted and sent to pathology which revealed a polypoid shape lesion with thin-walled vessels in the submucosa layer. Mucosa layer without atypia. The pathology conclusions were angiodysplasic lesion with polypoid shape (C, D) (Figs. 1 and 2).
The Impact Factor measures the average number of citations received in a particular year by papers published in the journal during the two preceding years.
© Clarivate Analytics, Journal Citation Reports 2025
SRJ is a prestige metric based on the idea that not all citations are the same. SJR uses a similar algorithm as the Google page rank; it provides a quantitative and qualitative measure of the journal's impact.
See moreSNIP measures contextual citation impact by wighting citations based on the total number of citations in a subject field.
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