5 research outputs found

    Functional improvement in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis undergoing single lung transplantation

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    AbstractObjective: To evaluate the changes in lung function in the first year after single lung transplantation in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF).Methods: We retrospectively evaluated patients with IPF who underwent single lung transplantation between January of 2006 and December of 2012, reviewing the changes in the lung function occurring during the first year after the procedure.Results: Of the 218 patients undergoing lung transplantation during the study period, 79 (36.2%) had IPF. Of those 79 patients, 24 (30%) died, and 11 (14%) did not undergo spirometry at the end of the first year. Of the 44 patients included in the study, 29 (66%) were men. The mean age of the patients was 57 years. Before transplantation, mean FVC, FEV1, and FEV1/FVC ratio were 1.78 L (50% of predicted), 1.48 L (52% of predicted), and 83%, respectively. In the first month after transplantation, there was a mean increase of 12% in FVC (400 mL) and FEV1 (350 mL). In the third month after transplantation, there were additional increases, of 5% (170 mL) in FVC and 1% (50 mL) in FEV1. At the end of the first year, the functional improvement persisted, with a mean gain of 19% (620 mL) in FVC and 16% (430 mL) in FEV1.Conclusions: Single lung transplantation in IPF patients who survive for at least one year provides significant and progressive benefits in lung function during the first year. This procedure is an important therapeutic alternative in the management of IPF

    Pneumonia estafilocócica adquirida na comunidade

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    OBJETIVO: A pneumonia estafilocócica geralmente apresenta uma elevada taxa de morbidade e mortalidade. Normalmente ocorre em infecções por influenza (via aerógena) ou durante episódios de bacteremia (via hematogênica). MÉTODOS: Um estudo retrospectivo e descritivo foi realizado com os pacientes que foram admitidos em nosso hospital entre janeiro de 1992 e dezembro de 2003 com diagnóstico de pneumonia adquirida na comunidade causada por Staphylococcus aureus. Todos eles eram maiores de 14 anos e não usuários de drogas endovenosas. RESULTADOS: De um total de 332 casos de pneumonia adquirida na comunidade, foram encontrados 24 pacientes (7,3%) com pneumonia estafilocócica. A idade mínima e máxima eram de, respectivamente, 14 anos e 89 anos. Quinze pacientes eram homens e nove eram mulheres. Doze pacientes preenchiam critérios para pneumonia grave. O radiograma de tórax evidenciou consolidação unilateral em 14 casos, bilateral em 10, derrame pleural em 15, rápida progressão radiológica das lesões pulmonares em 14, presença de cavitação em 6 e pneumotórax em 1 paciente. A maioria dos pacientes apresentou co-morbidades e diabetes mellitus foi a mais freqüente. Doze pacientes apresentaram complicações como empiema e choque séptico. Houve quatro óbitos, o que representou 16,6% da amostra. CONCLUSÕES: A apresentação clínica da pneumonia causada por S. aureus é similar à apresentação das pneumonias originadas por outros agentes etiológicos. Os achados radiológicos, os dados epidemiológicos e os fatores de risco fornecem importantes indícios para o diagnóstico. Estes fatores são importantes para uma suspeição clínica, já que o S. aureus normalmente não é incluído nos tratamentos empíricos

    High-resolution computed tomography findings of pulmonary tuberculosis in lung transplant recipients

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    ABSTRACT Objective: Respiratory infections constitute a major cause of morbidity and mortality in solid organ transplant recipients. The incidence of pulmonary tuberculosis is high among such patients. On imaging, tuberculosis has various presentations. Greater understanding of those presentations could reduce the impact of the disease by facilitating early diagnosis. Therefore, we attempted to describe the HRCT patterns of pulmonary tuberculosis in lung transplant recipients. Methods: From two hospitals in southern Brazil, we collected the following data on lung transplant recipients who developed pulmonary tuberculosis: gender; age; symptoms; the lung disease that led to transplantation; HRCT pattern; distribution of findings; time from transplantation to pulmonary tuberculosis; and mortality rate. The HRCT findings were classified as miliary nodules; cavitation and centrilobular nodules with a tree-in-bud pattern; ground-glass attenuation with consolidation; mediastinal lymph node enlargement; or pleural effusion. Results: We evaluated 402 lung transplant recipients, 19 of whom developed pulmonary tuberculosis after transplantation. Among those 19 patients, the most common HRCT patterns were ground-glass attenuation with consolidation (in 42%); cavitation and centrilobular nodules with a tree-in-bud pattern (in 31.5%); and mediastinal lymph node enlargement (in 15.7%). Among the patients with cavitation and centrilobular nodules with a tree-in-bud pattern, the distribution was within the upper lobes in 66.6%. No pleural effusion was observed. Despite treatment, one-year mortality was 47.3%. Conclusions: The predominant HRCT pattern was ground-glass attenuation with consolidation, followed by cavitation and centrilobular nodules with a tree-in-bud pattern. These findings are similar to those reported for immunocompetent patients with pulmonary tuberculosis and considerably different from those reported for AIDS patients with the same disease
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