Chest
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Case Reports
A 26-Year-Old Woman With Retinal Telangiectasias, Onychodystrophy, and Persistent Dyspnea.
A 26-year-old woman with no significant past medical history sought treatment for worsening dyspnea and hypoxia. The exertional dyspnea began 2 years prior and was associated with substernal chest discomfort. She did not report myalgia, edema, or worsening of dyspnea on supine or upright position. ⋯ She also was discovered incidentally to be leukopenic and thrombocytopenic, with subsequent bone marrow biopsy revealing hypocellularity of 30% to 40%. The patient concurrently demonstrated bilateral visual impairment secondary to retinal telangiectasias with increased severity of deficit in the right eye. She subsequently was referred to our institution for further evaluation.
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Case Reports
Expiratory Muscle Relaxation-Induced Ventilator Triggering: A Novel Patient-Ventilator Dyssynchrony.
In critically ill patients receiving mechanical ventilation, expiratory muscles are recruited with high respiratory loading and/or low inspiratory muscle capacity. In this case report, we describe a previously unrecognized patient-ventilator dyssynchrony characterized by ventilator triggering by expiratory muscle relaxation, an observation that we termed expiratory muscle relaxation-induced ventilator triggering (ERIT). ERIT can be recognized with in-depth respiratory muscle monitoring as (1) an increase in gastric pressure (Pga) during expiration, resulting from expiratory muscle recruitment; (2) a drop in Pga (and hence, esophageal pressure) at the time of ventilator triggering; and (3) diaphragm electrical activity onset occurring after ventilator triggering. Future studies should focus on the incidence of ERIT and the impact in the patient receiving mechanical ventilation.
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Case Reports
A 44-Year-Old Man With Right Limb Convulsion and Cavitary Lung Lesion With Diffuse Interstitial Abnormalities.
A 44-year-old man with a history of asthma presented with intermittent convulsion of the right limb, fever in the late afternoon, and decreased exercise tolerance over 2 months. Occasional productive cough, no hemoptysis, and weight loss of nearly 6 kg were observed during this period. Neither chemotherapy nor oral immunosuppressive drugs had been administered, and no exposure to toxic substances was known. ⋯ Bronchoscopy with BAL and transbronchial biopsy were nondiagnostic. While preparing for another diagnostic procedure, the patient gradually developed increasing dyspnea and more frequent convulsions with the progression of lesions on the follow-up chest CT scan. The patient was transferred to our hospital.