Chest
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Case Reports
A 44-Year-Old Woman with Dyspnea and Hemoptysis in the Setting of Remote Bariatric Surgery.
A 44-year-old woman was transferred to the ED from an outside hospital because of hemoptysis and concern for left-sided pulmonary infiltrate with associated pleural effusion. The patient presented to this outside hospital multiple times over the past 3 months because of left-sided shoulder pain, diffuse myalgias, and supraventricular tachycardia. On her third visit, she was found to have a left-sided pleural effusion and underwent diagnostic and therapeutic thoracentesis; 1.5 L of fluid was removed. ⋯ Before her transfer, the patient experienced foul-smelling, maroon-colored hemoptysis as well as anemia that required a higher level of care. On arrival to the ED, she was in acute hypoxic respiratory failure. The patient was intubated emergently and was admitted to the medical critical care unit for further treatment.
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A 62-year-old White man with a history of orthotopic liver transplantation 16 years ago for alcoholic liver cirrhosis on chronic immunosuppression and recurrent decompensated cirrhosis of his graft liver complicated by ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, and esophageal varices presented to the hospital with altered mental status. Over the last few weeks, he had reduced frequency of bowel movements and subsequently developed altered sensorium 3 days before presentation. On arrival to the hospital, he was disoriented and had asterixis consistent with hepatic encephalopathy. ⋯ He subsequently underwent a bronchoscopy with BAL and transbronchial biopsy. BAL fluid was negative for bacterial, fungal, and acid-fast bacilli cultures. Pathology from the transbronchial biopsy showed atypical epithelioid cells in intravascular spaces.
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A 15-year-old boy presented with three acute episodes of self-limited hemoptysis. He was being followed by the pediatric pulmonology department for necrotizing pneumonia and a right upper lobe lung abscess with residual pneumatocele 5 years earlier. ⋯ The patient's father had presented with more than 20 skin abscesses and was carrier of methicillin-resistant S aureus. After necrotizing pneumonia and along with his family history, the patient had undergone a neutrophil oxidative burst test excluding chronic granulomatous disease; immunoglobulin levels and lymphocyte populations were within normal range.
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A 67-year-old woman developed sudden-onset severe dyspnea 24 h after a bilateral sequential lung transplant for COPD. She had an uneventful surgery performed on cardiopulmonary bypass support. ⋯ Her primary graft dysfunction score was grade 2, 1, and 1 at 0, 12, and 24 h, respectively. Approximately 24 h after the procedure, she complained of increasing shortness of breath without fever, chills, cough, or pleuritic chest pain.