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Mazin Barry, Mohammed AlGhamdi, Kutubo Manneh, Abiola Senok and Ali Somily
Our patient is a 56 years old Indian gentleman who presented to our hospitals emergency department with right upper quadrant pain which started three hours earlier, the pain was colicky and moderately severe, there was none of the following: radiation, nausea, vomiting, fever nor jaundice. He was hemodynamically stable, on physical exam he had mild tenderness over the right upper quadrant, no guarding nor rigidity, bowel sounds were audible, liver function tests were sent and all the enzymes and bilirubin were within normal range. No ultrasound was done at this time; he was given intramuscular scopolamine, and was prescribed ranitidine daily. He remained symptom free for the next 4 months, when he developed sudden onset of fever, chills and rigors, with no other symptoms, he again presented to our hospitals emergency department, the emergency physician assessment couldnt find a focus of infection for his fever, a blood culture was drawn, and he was discharged on acetaminophen. That same night the blood culture grew a gram negative bacilli, he was called back to the emergency department, where intravenous ceftriaxone was started, the gram negative was later identified as E. coli, which was an extended spectrum Lactamase (ESBL) producer, it was only susceptible to imipenem.