| Literature DB >> 31246163 |
Abigail Masding1, Stephen D Preston2, Mark Toshner3, Joseph Barnett4, Carl Harries1, Konstantinos Dimopoulos1, Aleksander Kempny1, Colm McCabe1, David P Jenkins3, S John Wort1, Laura C Price1.
Abstract
A 36-year-old woman presented with recurrent pulmonary emboli (PE) despite oral anticoagulation. She was a type I diabetic with severe gastroparesis requiring insertion of multiple long-term peripherally inserted central catheters (PICC) over a 10-year period. Imaging at presentation demonstrated a PICC-associated mobile mass in the right atrium and signs of pulmonary hypertension (PH). She was thrombolyzed and fully anticoagulated, and diabetic management without PICC strongly recommended. PH persisted, however, and she developed chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH), for which successful pulmonary endarterectomy (PEA) surgery led to symptomatic and hemodynamic improvement. This was the first case of CTEPH reported related to long-term PICC use outside the setting of malignant disease, and a novel observation that the PEA specimen contained multiple plastic fragments. Long-term PICC placement increases the risk of CTEPH, a life-threatening, albeit treatable, complication.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension; diabetes; pulmonary endarterectomy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31246163 PMCID: PMC6598327 DOI: 10.1177/2045894019859474
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pulm Circ ISSN: 2045-8932 Impact factor: 3.017
Fig. 1.Macroscopic and microscopic pulmonary endarterectomy specimens. (a) Gross specimen of pulmonary endarterectomy casts. The casts consist mainly of very fine distal branches containing some blackish material along with some thicker yellow proximal organizing thrombus. (b) Dense luminal fibrosis with black pigment and colorless, transparent material (arrow; hematoxylin and eosin stain [H&E], 100×). (c) Some of the foreign material is polarizable (white arrow) and some stains blue on the elastic van Gieson stain (blue arrow; 100×). (d) Some of the pigment stains blue on a Perl's stain indicating hemosiderin, but most of the pigment is not hemosiderin (200×). (e) In places, the foreign material elicits a macrophage giant cell reaction (arrow; H&E, 400×).