Occam's razor versus Hickam's dictum: Two very rare tumours in one single patient

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Abstract

Occam's razor, the principle that a single explanation is the most likely in medicine, assumes that when a patient has multiple symptoms the clinician seeks a single diagnosis rather than diagnosing multiple and different ones. However, as proposed by Hickam's dictum, sometimes rare different diseases occurred in only one patient. We present a patient with a simultaneous diagnosis of two rare tumours, a cardiac hemangioma (primary cardiac tumour, often misdiagnosed as myxoma) and an appendiceal mucocele (a lesion of the appendix that can be neoplastic or not). A 71-year-old male presented with anorexia, asthenia, fever and weight loss for about one month. During the etiological investigation, a cardiac mass and an appendiceal lesion were detected and both lesions required surgical intervention. Cardiac and abdominal surgeries were uneventful and full recovery was achieved. The histological examination showed a cardiac hemangioma and a neoplastic appendiceal mucocele.

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Freixa, M., Simões, A. F., Rodrigues, J. B., Úria, S., & Da Silva, G. N. (2019). Occam’s razor versus Hickam’s dictum: Two very rare tumours in one single patient. Oxford Medical Case Reports, 2019(5), 195–198. https://doi.org/10.1093/omcr/omz029

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