| Literature DB >> 33199334 |
Carmen Venegas1, Sarah Svenningsen1, Melanie Kjarsgaard2, Mark Tarnopolsky3, Kim Anderson4, Sebastian Levesque5, Benjamin A Raby6, Grace Parraga7, Gerard Cox1, Parameswaran Nair8.
Abstract
Breathlessness is a subjective symptom that may stem from a number of pathological and functional aetiologies. Consequently, clinicians are often faced with the challenge of navigating between the tensions of Occam's razor (parsimonious aetiology) or Hickam's dictum (multiple diagnoses). We report a case of a 36-year-old woman with a lifelong history of episodic breathlessness caused at various times by dysfunctions of lung parenchyma (emphysema) and airway smooth muscle (asthma), skeletal muscle (filamin-C fibrillary myopathy) and cardiac muscle (cardiomyopathy). We illustrate the utility of the modern diagnostic toolbox in the assessment, understanding and management of complex dyspnoea (including the use of inflammometry, inhaled-gas magnetic resonance imaging-guided bronchial thermoplasty, and genetic testing), and also demonstrate the importance of interdisciplinary data interpretation in establishing accurate aetiologic diagnoses. © Royal College of Physicians 2020. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Asthma; breathlessness; cardiomyopathy; inhaled-gas MRI; myofibrillar myopathy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33199334 PMCID: PMC7687324 DOI: 10.7861/clinmed.2020-0661
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Med (Lond) ISSN: 1470-2118 Impact factor: 2.659