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We all worry about our own health, the more so as we get older, and even more so when we became medical students and then doctors with inside but incomplete knowledge. As a student I well remember developing and then recovering spontaneously from Hodgkin's disease as well as motor neuron disease. Later in life I convinced myself that I had a malignant pleural effusion before an agreeable radiological colleague arranged for a normal chest x-ray. But what if I had worried about brain secondaries and had persuaded him to do an MR brain scan? In the last issue of Practical Neurology Rustam Al-Shai Salman warned us of the consequences of incidental findings on brain imaging. …
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