Some tests take several days to yield results. If you insist on waiting for the results before administering medication, the patient might not survive long enough to see them.
Experts at the Provincial Children's Hospital administered blood transfusions, hemostatic treatments, and anti-infective therapies to the pediatric patient before identifying the cause of the illness.
Currently, the suspected diseases are intestinal hookworm disease, Crohn's Disease, lymphoma, and intestinal tuberculosis.
Based on the treatments administered, the experts seem more inclined toward intestinal tuberculosis.
This is because many of the child's symptoms closely resemble those of intestinal tuberculosis, which is a common disease in our country.
After imaging studies, the possibility of an intestinal tumor is virtually ruled out.
Initially, there was a lot of hope placed on the possibility of an intestinal tumor.
Because a large, cord-like mass was palpable in the ileocecal region.
