13 Výsledek
A 23-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of chest pain and dyspnea. X-ray and computed tomography showed left tension hemopneumothorax. After the emergent surgery, re-expansion pulmonary edema (RPE) occurred. Non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) was applied to control RPE
A 43-year-old male patient with spontaneous hemopneumothorax of the right lung underwent emergency video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery for drainage, hemostasis and bullae resection. Fifteen minutes after reexpansion of the right lung, we found bubbly sputum coming out from the right tracheal tube
A 44-year-old man was admitted to out hospital complaining of chest pain and increasing dyspnea. Chest X-ray on admission revealed a collapsed lung and an air fluid line in the left hemothorax. Following blood transfusion because of 2,000 ml hemorrhagic pleural fluid, emergent surgery was carried
Re-expansion pulmonary edema (REPE) is an uncommon complication following re-expansion of the lung as treatment of conditions such as hemopneumothorax, large pleural effusion, and after lobectomy, pneumothorax, or even during single-lung ventilation. The majority of REPE complications are associated
We present the case of a 19-year-old woman who developed sudden severe left-sided tension pneumothorax in the recovery room after undergoing a 6-hour open reduction and internal fixation of an anterior and posterior pelvic fracture sustained in a motor vehicle accident 4 days prior to surgery.
A 21-year-old man; complaining of left chest pain and dyspnea, was admitted to our hospital with a diagnosis of spontaneous pneumothorax. Though chest X-ray on admission did not show hemothorax, chest drainage revealed intrapleural bleeding. As chest X-ray on the following day showed evident fluid
A 46-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of dyspnea and chest pain. We diagnosed tension hemopneumothorax and chest tube drainage was performed. A large volume of bloody pleural fluid (1,200 ml) was removed, but severe liver and renal dysfunction were then recognized. He was treated
Bilateral re-expansion pulmonary edema (RPE) is an extremely rare entity. We report the unique case of bilateral RPE following a traumatic, unilateral hemopneumothorax in a young healthy male. Bilateral RPE occurred only one hour after drainage of a unilateral hemopneumothorax. The patient was
We present a case of a 27-year-old man with gunshot injury in the neck and the chest. On admission, he had an entry wound in the neck and his chest radiograph showed left hemopneumothorax. Nasal endotracheal intubation and chest drainage were immediately performed. Angiography revealed
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate HRCT scans of the chest in 22 patients with cocaine-induced pulmonary disease.
METHODS
We included patients between 19 and 52 years of age. The HRCT scans were evaluated by two radiologists independently, discordant results being resolved by consensus. The inclusion criterion
The chest radiographs of 71 patients who had chest pain or shortness of breath following the smoking of highly potent "crack" cocaine were retrospectively evaluated. Nine patients had abnormal findings on radiographs as follows: atelectasis or localized parenchymal opacification in four,
Although post-traumatic cerebral infarction is a known complication of craniocerebral trauma, borderzone infarction (BZI) after multiple traumas in young adults are uncommon and published data on this are extremely scant. We present an unusual occurrence of unilateral borderzone infarction in a