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- Title
Yellow nail syndrome, Phrygian cap gallbladder and Saint's triad? Case report.
- Authors
Santos, Vitorino Modesto; Manabu Yano, Victor; Queiroz Alves da Cunha, Gabriel Luan; Lemes Duarte, Mayza; Passini Soares, Viviane Vieira; Frota Boggio, Leonardo
- Abstract
The yellow nail syndrome is scarcely described and is characterized by dystrophic nails, pulmonary disturbances and lymphedema of extremities. A case of this syndrome is reported in an 89-year-old Brazilian woman with well-controlled diabetes mellitus and arterial hypertension. Additionally to the typical syndrome, the patient also presented pincer nails and yellow-brownish chromonychia. She was admitted because of acute abdominal symptoms associated with sigmoid diverticulitis and an adjacent abscess. The imaging studies revealed pulmonary and pleural changes, in addition to pericardial effusion. Incidentally, the features of Phrygian cap gallbladder anomaly were found. Neither diverticular disease nor gallbladder disorders have been related to yellow nail syndrome. In the present case study, the synchronism between some of these conditions could be casual; but diverticular disease, cholelithiasis, and diaphragmatic hernia are associated in the Saint's triad.
- Subjects
YELLOW nail syndrome; GALLBLADDER diseases
- Publication
Médicas UIS, 2015, Vol 28, Issue 3, p387
- ISSN
0121-0319
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.18273/revmed.v28n3-2015014