| Literature DB >> 32042431 |
Shota Yamamoto1, Shunsuke Kamei1, Yusuke Kondo2, Shinichiro Hiraiwa3, Terumitsu Hasebe1, Fumio Sakamaki2.
Abstract
Primary lung cancer (PLC) presents with various symptoms. However, there have been no reports of PLC causing haemothorax and haemoptysis simultaneously. We present an unusual case of massive haemothorax and haemoptysis caused by a PLC, in which haemostasis was secured with interventional radiology. A 58-year-old woman was hospitalized for a right secondary pneumothorax associated with emphysema. Chest computed tomography showed a mass shadow at the right lower lobe and on the right parietal pleura. Three days after air drainage, about 2000 mL of bloody pleural effusion accompanied by massive haemoptysis was observed. Haemoglobin concentration decreased to 4.9 g/dL and the patient was treated with selective embolization of the bronchial artery and the intercostal arteries. A diagnosis of PLC was made based on pleural fluid cytology. The patient was transferred to the palliative care hospital three months later without recurrence of haemothorax and haemoptysis.Entities:
Keywords: Bronchial artery embolization; haemoptysis; haemothorax; hypoxaemia; lung cancer
Year: 2020 PMID: 32042431 PMCID: PMC7002221 DOI: 10.1002/rcr2.529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respirol Case Rep ISSN: 2051-3380
Figure 1Chest computed tomography (CT) and angiographic findings. (A) CT on admission day revealed a right secondary pneumothorax of emphysema. There was a pleura‐attached mass shadow with cavity at the periphery of the right lower lobe (S6); the diameter was 35 mm (black arrows). There was partial thickness of the parietal pleura and no pleural effusion. (B) CT with contrast agent on the day of haemothorax and haemoptysis. There was consolidation in the right middle/lower lobes, and a right pleural effusion had appeared. There was an 18‐mm‐diameter nodule invading the chest wall at the right eighth rib level (white arrows). A chest tube was inserted via the front chest. (C) Angiography of the right eighth intercostal artery showed contrast agent in the vicinity of the pleural nodule (black arrowheads). This site was considered the origin of bleeding. (D) Angiography of the right bronchial artery revealed contrast agent in the same area as the right eighth intercostal artery (black arrowheads).
Figure 2Cytological findings of pleural fluid. (A) Tumour cells forming epithelioid clusters. Most of the tumour cells had pale cytoplasm and hyperchromatic nuclei with prominent nucleoli (Papanicolaou's stain, 400× magnification). (B) The nuclei of atypical cells were scored positive for thyroid transcription factor‐1 (TTF‐1) following immunocytochemistry (immunostain, 400× magnification).