A 32-year-old female patient is described who suffered from common symptoms such as Raynaud's phenomenon and swollen fingers, high titers of antibodies to U1RNP, SLE-like findings, scleroderma-like findings and polymyositis-like findings. A diagnosis of mixed connective tissue disease (Sharp-syndrome) was established. In addition, the patient had antibodies against cardiolipin, thrombocytopenia, recurrent fetal loss and a history of deep venous thrombosis of her left leg which is typical for an antiphospholipid syndrome. The symptoms dry eyes and dry mouth pointed at secondary Sjögren's syndrome. The diagnosis of these disease entities and the therapeutic regimens are described and discussed.