| Literature DB >> 35637824 |
Tahmina Jahir1, Sadaf Hossain2, Tsering Dolkar1, Meet J Patel1, Ruby Risal1, Ahmad Khan1, Aneeta Kumari1, Marie Schmidt1, Danilo Enriquez1, Harish Patel1.
Abstract
Etiologies of hemorrhagic pleural effusions (hemithoraces) are multifactorial. They can be traumatic, non-traumatic, or idiopathic in nature. In this report, we present a rare case of a 64-year-old male with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) on chronic hemodialysis and dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT), due to a recent history of coronary arterial stent placement, who presented with progressive shortness of breath for one month. The CT of the chest revealed bilateral large pleural effusions (left > right) with a complete collapse of the left lung and partial collapse of the right lung. Ultrasound-guided left-sided thoracentesis revealed hemorrhagic pleural effusions. After the discontinuation of DAPT, drainage from the right-sided pleural effusion via a pigtail catheter showed continued drainage of pleural fluid without hemorrhage. The effusion on the left side was also noted to have resolved on the repeat chest X-ray. Prompt recognition of this rare cause of any hemorrhagic pleural effusion is essential for patients on dialysis to avoid complications. This report focuses on the possible etiology and potential complications of a hemorrhagic pleural effusion, followed by a brief discussion on the rare but significant association involving the incidence of a hemorrhagic pleural effusion in a dialysis patient receiving DAPT.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac stent; dialysis; dual anti-platelet therapy; fibrothorax; hemorrhagic pleural effusion; hemothorax; spontaneous hemothorax
Year: 2022 PMID: 35637824 PMCID: PMC9130116 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.24450
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1First chest X-ray on admission
Figure 2CT of the chest without contrast on admission showing bilateral pleural effusion (arrows)
CT: computed tomography
Figure 3Chest X-ray after thoracotomy with two left-sided chest tubes and a small-to-moderate left pneumothorax (indicated by arrows on the right side of the X-ray) with a persistent large right pleural effusion (arrow on the left)
Causes of hemorrhagic pleural effusion
SLE: systemic lupus erythematosus
| Causes | Examples |
| Infection | Bacterial pneumonia, Mycobacterium tuberculosis |
| Malignancy | Pleuropulmonary malignancy, bronchogenic carcinoma, leukemia (acute and chronic), pleural tumor lymphoma, e.g., Hodgkin's lymphoma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Tumors of the ribs, e.g., osteosarcoma Metastasis to pleura and mediastinal nodes, e.g., breast carcinoma, choriocarcinoma, malignant melanoma, hypernephroma, retroperitoneal chondrosarcoma. Bony tumor, e.g., Ewing sarcoma |
| Connective tissue disease | SLE |
| Asbestos exposure | Benign as well as malignant mesothelioma |
| Abdominal diseases | Pancreatitis ovarian tumors - benign (Meigs syndrome as well as malignant tumors, uremic pleuritis, diaphragmatic hernia) |
| Cardiovascular | Aneurysm rupture, pulmonary infarction, pulmonary thromboembolism post coronary artery bypass grafting |
| Bleeding disorder | Overdose of anticoagulant, thrombotic microangiopathies, Thalassemia, liver cirrhosis |
| Miscellaneous causes | Superior vena cava syndrome, Kawasaki disease, chronic renal failure, and intralobar sequestration |