From the Journals

Atypical Meningococcemia: Diagnostic Lessons From a Fatal Case

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A recent case study highlights the atypical presentation of invasive meningococcal disease in a middle-aged woman with chronic liver disease, who displayed gastrointestinal symptoms instead of the traditional rash. Following international travel to Brazil, she presented with fever, abdominal pain, and rapidly progressed to septic shock and coagulopathy. The absence of classic signs complicates early diagnosis, underscoring the need for awareness among infectious disease physicians to include meningococcal disease in differential diagnoses, particularly in patients with risk factors like liver dysfunction.

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