Chest
-
A 49-year-old woman with a history of right breast cancer status post radiation therapy presented to our ED with increasing chest pain, exertional dyspnea, fatigue, and dizziness for several weeks. She denied syncope or near-syncope, and she had no personal or family history of cardiac disease. Her outpatient medications included tamoxifen and venlafaxine.
-
A 60-year-old man was referred to a pulmonologist evaluation with persistent dyspnea and cough 1 month after discharge for an acute respiratory failure caused by Legionella pneumophila pneumonia, which required invasive mechanical ventilation. Chest CT scan performed during hospitalization showed lobar consolidation of upper left lobe (Fig 1A). ⋯ Chest radiograph after extubation showed almost complete resolution of infiltrates. After 1 month, the patient still complained of dyspnea and a new chest CT scan was performed: the consolidation migrated (Fig 1B; Video 1).