Chest
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Case Reports
Two Siblings With Peripheral Pulmonary Arterial Stenosis: Pulmonary Angiography of Advanced and Early Stages.
Peripheral pulmonary arterial stenosis (PPAS) is known to cause pulmonary hypertension (PH). Although adult patients at advanced stage have been increasingly reported, there are few reports on clinical characteristics and pulmonary angiography (PAG) findings of early stage PPAS. We present two Japanese siblings with PPAS with homozygosity of RNF213 p. ⋯ Notably, her PAG demonstrated nonthrombotic stenosis in the subsegmental branches of the pulmonary arteries with varying degrees of stenosis among lung segments. Taken together with a family history, genetic analysis, and cerebral angiography, the obtained images were considered as showing PPAS with early stage. This result is clinically informative to diagnose PPAS at an early stage and is also important to understand the pathogenesis of PPAS.
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A 19-year-old, previously healthy man presented with 3 days of cough, high-grade fevers (40 °C), and dyspnea. Apart from a resolved history of seizures not requiring medications, he had no medical or surgical history. He had no known drug allergies. ⋯ He had animal exposures to a new puppy and a friend's bird. He had no history of smoking, vaping, or recreational drug use. His paternal grandmother had rheumatoid arthritis.
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An 84-year-old man with an active smoking habit presented to the ED with dyspnea, hemoptysis, and thick phlegm that was difficult to clear. He reported no weight loss, no fever, and no chest pain or dysphonia. He denied both international travel and previous contact with confirmed cases of TB or SARS-CoV-2. ⋯ The patient's personal history included a resolved complete atrioventricular block that required a permanent pacemaker, moderate-to-severe COPD, rheumatoid arthritis (treated with oral prednisone, 2.5 mg/d) and B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia (treated with methotrexate and prophylactic oral supplements of ferrous sulfate). Moreover, he was in medical follow up because of a peptic ulcer, atrophic gastritis, and colonic diverticulosis. The patient also had a history of thoracic surgery after an episode of acute mediastinitis from an odontogenic infection, which required ICU management and temporal tracheostomy.
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A previously healthy 47-year-old nonsmoking woman was admitted to our hospital with an 8-month history of progressive exertional dyspnea and fatigue. Chest high-resolution CT (HRCT) on admission showed diffuse, bilateral, patchy ground-glass opacity (GGO) (Fig 1A). She was diagnosed with interstitial lung disease, and corticosteroid therapy with 8 weeks prednisone taper was completed, with initial good response. ⋯ She denied a history of allergy or taking other drugs. She had no occupational or environmental exposures. There was no family history of respiratory diseases or hematologic diseases.