23 research outputs found

    Defying the paradigm — rescue thrombolysis in a postoperative patient with pulmonary embolism

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    Parenteral anticoagulation is recommended for patients of intermediate — high early mortality risk pulmonary embolism. Rescue reperfusion is considered if signs of hemodynamic decompensation appear. Recent surgery is a contraindication to thrombolysis. Percutaneous catheter directed thrombolysis and surgical embolectomy can be done in such patients. However, they are not readily available. We hereby report a case of rescue thrombolysis in a post lower segment caesarean section (LSCS) patient with pulmonary thromboembolism. We could successfully achieve thrombolysis in our patient with improvement in clinical and hemodynamic parameters and with no major bleeding from any site

    A young non-smoker with high ADA pleural effusion. It’s not always tuberculosis

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    Lung cancer is posing an ever-increasing medical and social problem due to its increasing morbidity and mortality. Here we report a case of a young male who was being treated as tubercular pleural effusion but was ultimately diagnosed with non-small cell carcinoma. While considering the diagnosis of pleural effusion, in the context of country endemic for tuberculosis like India, it is not surprising that many clinicians rather prefer to consider pulmonary tuberculosis as the first differential, while keeping diagnosis of malignancy as the least likely differential diagnosis in the young patient

    Mediastinal germ cell tumour masquerading as loculated pleural effusion

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    Benign mediastinal teratomas often discovered while patients are still asymptomatic. Almost all arise in the anterosuperior mediastinal compartment. Most symptoms result from compression of adjacent structures. We report a case of a large teratoma arising from the anterior mediastinum that presented a confusing clinical picture of loculated pleural effusion which was successfully diagnosed and treated by surgical excisio

    Asymptomatic patient with “lumpy and bumpy” airways. A case of pulmonary MALToma

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    Primary pulmonary lymphoma is a rare disease. The most frequent primary pulmonary lymphoma (PPL) is extranodal marginal zone B-cell lymphoma of MALT. About half of the patients are asymptomatic at diagnosis. We report a case of a 62-year-old male referred to us for preoperative assessment of surgery for Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH). He had no respiratory complaints but on evaluation was detected to have Pulmonary MALToma. Our case highlights the importance of tissue diagnosis

    Cotrimoxazole-induced SIADH — a unique challenge during treatment of pulmonary nocardiosis

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    A 62 year old male non-smoker diagnosed with pulmonary nocardiosis was initiated on Cotrimoxazole therapy at a dose of 20 mg/kg per day in three divided doses. He developed hyponatremia (serum sodium 105 mEq/L) on day 3 of therapy. The potential causes of hyponatremia were evaluated. After ruling out other causes, the cause was suspected to be Cotrimoxazole-induced syndrome of inappropriate anti-diuretic hormone secretion (SIADH). We subsequently re-initiated therapy with Cotrimoxazole and the hyponatremia (serum sodium 110 mEq/L) recurred. Upon discontinuation of therapy, serum sodium levels returned to normal. The patient was started on Amoxycillin-Clavulanic Acid as an alternative therapy for pulmonary nocardiosis which resulted in resolution of the hyponatremia. Cotrimoxazole-induced SIADH is a rare occurrence. This case is representative of a patient with Cotrimoxazole-induced SIADH and the causal relationship was confirmed once resumption of therapy with the offending medi-cation resulted in hyponatremia. Clinicians should be aware of this rare adverse effect of Cotrimoxazole and should monitor serum electrolytes during therapy, especially in the elderly and in those receiving high doses

    Vascular patterns on narrow band imaging (NBI) video bronchoscopy of lung cancer patients and its relationship with histology: an analytical cross-sectional study

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    Introduction: Narrow band imaging (NBI) video bronchoscopy provides better visualisation of submucosal vascular patterns in malignant airway lesions compared to white light bronchoscopy. This analytical cross-sectional study was aimed to look for any relationship between these NBI vascular patterns and the histologic type of lung cancer.Material and methods: After screening 78 patients with suspected lung cancer, 53 subjects underwent video bronchoscopy. Thirty-two patients showing abnormal bronchial mucosa or endobronchial growth with any of the NBI vascular patterns on bronchoscopy were enrolled in the study. These abnormal areas were then biopsied and sent for histologic examination.Results: NBI bronchoscopy revealed a dilated tortuous vascular pattern in 54.8% of the patients, a non-specific pattern in 32%, a dotted pattern in 9.7% and an abrupt ending vessels pattern in 3.2% of the patients. We did not find any statistically significant relationship between a dilated tortuous pattern and squamous-cell carcinoma (p = 0.48), adenocarcinoma (p = 0.667) or small-cell carcinoma (p = 1); between a dotted pattern and squamous-cell carcinoma (p = 1), adenocarcinoma (p = 0.54) or small-cell carcinoma (p = 1), and between an abrupt ending capillary pattern and squamous-cell carcinoma (p = 1), adenocarcinoma (p = 1) or small-cell carcinoma (p =1).Conclusion: No relationship exists between NBI vascular patterns and the histology of lung cancer. Endobronchial lesions showing any vascular pattern on NBI needs to be adequately sampled for proper histologic and molecular studies in lung cancer patients

    Gynecomastia in Multi-Drug Resistant Tuberculosis—Ethionamide the Villain

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    A 59-year-old married male, a known case of line probe assay-confirmed multidrug-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis was treated with kanamycin, levofloxacin, ethionamide, ethambutol, pyrazinamide and cycloserine for seven months [...

    A Young Non-Smoker with High ADA Pleural Effusion. It’s Not Always Tuberculosis

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    Lung cancer is posing an ever-increasing medical and social problem due to its increasing morbidity and mortality [...

    Mediastinal Germ Cell Tumour Masquerading as Loculated Pleural Effusion

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    We report a case of a large teratoma arising from the anterior mediastinum that presented as a confusing clinical picture of loculated pleural effusion which was successfully diagnosed and treated by surgical excision [...
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