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A 47-year-old woman with acute necrotizing pancreatitis developed sudden cardiorespiratory arrest and needed resuscitation. A pericardial effusion was found, and 350 ml of a white nontransparent milky fluid was aspirated that contained 1020 mg triglycerides/100 ml. The diagnosis of chylous cardiac
BACKGROUND
Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) via central venous catheter (CVC) is used routinely to provide adequate nutrition for neonates, especially those with very low birth weights (VLBWN). Pericardial effusion and cardiac tamponade (PCE/CT) is a potentially life-threatening CVC
Serum free fatty acid (FFA) flux is decreased in shock. The question arose whether the limited availability of FFA would result in a fuel deficit in organs containing no stored lipid and also in the slower turnover of organ phospholipids. The fasting dog's lung, stomach, heart, and liver contained
A patient developed chylopericardium after mitral valve replacement. Although there was early relapse with cardiac tamponade it eventually resolved with conservative management consisting of tube drainage initially and a medium chain triglyceride diet for two months.
Behçet's disease is a chronic multisystem vasculitis of unknown aetiology. This case report describes a patient who applied to the hospital because of dyspnoea, ascites, oedema of lower extremities and recurrent episodes of haemoptysis. For the last 12 yr, he had superior vena cava syndrome (SVCS)
Primary chylopericardium is a rare disease with a highly variable clinical course. We report on a 24-year old female with chylopericardium detected during a pulmonary infection. Despite successful treatment of the infectious disease, the chylopericardium persisted and led to cardiac tamponade. From
Chylopericardium is a rare entity that may be congenital in origin or secondary to surgical trauma, mediastinal lymphangiomas-hygromas, or radiation. Current treatment progresses from dietary medium-chain triglycerides and pericardiocentesis, to pericardial drainage, to thoracotomy with
Chylothorax and chylopericardium refer to the presence of milky, triglyceride-rich chylous fluid in the thoracic and pericardial spaces, respectively. Both conditions are extremely uncommon in end-stage renal disease patients on dialysis. We report the first known case of combined chylothorax and
Hemodialysis patients may die suddenly and unexpectedly from a number of causes. These may be divided into those deaths due directly to and occurring during hemodialysis, those deaths occurring while the patient is not undergoing dialysis, and those deaths that may occur at any time. The first group