62-Year-Old Male Breakdown | Complete Expert iHuman Week #10 Review of
62-Year-Old Male Case Study
iHuman Week #10 – Full Clinical Analysis
Case: 62-Year-Old Male with Urinary Frequency
1. Chief Complaint (CC)
• “I’m peeing all the time”
• Worse at night (nocturia: ~3–4 times/night)
2. History of Present Illness (HPI)
Key features you should always extract:
• Gradual onset over months
• Increasing urinary frequency (day + night)
, • Urgency (can’t hold urine)
• Weak stream / incomplete emptying
• No pain or burning (usually)
• No fever, hematuria, or systemic symptoms
Pattern strongly suggests lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS)
3. Most Likely Diagnosis (PRIMARY)
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH)
Why BPH?
• Age > 60 (very common)
• Nocturia + frequency
• Weak stream
• Incomplete emptying sensation
• Progressive symptoms over time
This is the #1 tested answer in iHuman for this case
4. Differential Diagnoses
You must ALWAYS include these in exams:
1. Diabetes Mellitus
• Polyuria (large volumes)
• Polydipsia
• Check glucose
2. Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
• Dysuria, urgency, fever