Current counseling practice for pregnancy and contraception in women with CHD is inadequate. Failure to give knowledgeable family planning advice appropriate for the individual risk profile in this high-risk patient group can have hazardous consequences and cause an unnecessary risk for mother and child. Many doctors fail to confront their patients with congenital heart defects early with issues of regarding sexuality, pregnancy and contraception and to advise them adequately. A cooperative approach involving congenital cardiologists as well as experienced gynecological endocrinologists with appropriate knowledge about CHD is indispensable.
A 54-year-old patient presented with progressive pain for one month in the second finger of the right hand with an emphasis on the proximal interphalangeal (PIP) joint. Subsequent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a diffuse intraosseous lesion at the base of the middle phalanx with destruction of the cortical bone and extraosseous soft tissue. An expansively growing chondromatous bone tumor, e.g., a chondrosarcoma, was suspected. After incisional biopsy, the pathologic findings finally revealed, surprisingly, a metastasis of a poorly differentiated non-small cell adenocarcinoma of the lung. This case illustrates a rare but important differential diagnosis for painful finger lesions.
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