Exact(10)
Opportunistic infections accounted for the majority (67%) of class I discrepancies.
In patients with class I discrepancies the most frequently missed diagnosis was myocardial infarction.
Shown are the findings in the 10 patients with class I discrepancies.
Class I discrepancies were defined as a missed major diagnosis that, had it been made, would have changed management and might have resulted in prolonged survival.
Class I discrepancies represent major missed diagnoses in which knowledge of the postmortem findings might have altered treatment and/or prolonged survival.
Class I discrepancies were due to opportunistic infections (67%) and cardiac complications (33%), whereas class II discrepancies were due to cardiopulmonary complications (70%) and opportunistic infections (30%).
Similar(50)
A Goldman class I discrepancy is a missed major diagnosis in which the principle, underlying causes of death was missed with probable adverse impact on survival.
This initial paper of a series of three, which specifically deals with item (i), shows discrepancies between the levels of polymorphic phase transformation detected in ZTA retrievals and in vitro predictions, and attempts a phenomenological analysis of the reasons behind such discrepancies.
Even then I sensed discrepancy, as I joined an editorial conference (to help prepare, perhaps, a special number on Literature and Society), wearing shoulder-length hair, a flowered shirt, and knee-high tricoloured boots (well concealed, it is true, by the twin tepees of my flared trousers).
They sent it to me and I found discrepancies in what they promised and what was in writing, which I made them fix".
If I find no inferential discrepancies, I generally report the findings from method A. I do this because I frequently work with cluster sizes larger than n = 20 and I am interested in both point estimates and variance-covariance discussions.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com