“Stuck on the matching section again?” he asked.

Later, Lena signed off on the chart. She wrote: Diagnosis matched to exam per Chapter 20 guidelines. Conservative ureteroscopy scheduled.

Lena smiled. “Textbook matching — but applied.”

Dr. Lena Vasquez turned the page to of her surgical prep manual. The heading read: Genitourinary Surgery: Matching Diagnostic Examinations to Clinical Presentations.

She walked to Mrs. Kowalski’s room. The elderly woman was clutching a pillow. “Doctor, I’m so tired of not knowing.”

Matt asked, “So why does the book make it sound so simple?”

Lena nodded. “Mrs. Kowalski in room 4. She’s got flank pain, hematuria, and a history of recurrent UTIs. My exam suggests possible renal calculus or transitional cell carcinoma. But before I decide on a cystoscopy versus a CT urogram, I need to match her symptoms to the right diagnostic exam — like the book says.”

Here’s a short story based on the phrase : Title: The Right Match

Matt scanned the page. “Then you match her presentation to ultrasound first. Noninvasive, no contrast. If that’s inconclusive, then non-contrast CT.”

She sighed, rubbing her tired eyes. Across the table, her intern, Matt, looked up from his stack of patient charts.

“Because matching is just the first step,” Lena replied. “Surgery — and caring for the person — is where the real story begins.” If you’d like, I can also turn this into a or a clinical case matching quiz based on Chapter 20 of a textbook. Just let me know.

The renal ultrasound showed a 6 mm stone lodged at the ureteropelvic junction — no tumor, no invasive testing needed.

“Exactly,” Lena said. “But the match isn’t just about the disease. It’s about the patient. Mrs. Kowalski has early-stage kidney disease — contrast is risky.”