Critical Care
The Southwest Journal of Pulmonary and Critical Care publishes articles directed to those who treat patients in the ICU, CCU and SICU including chest physicians, surgeons, pediatricians, pharmacists/pharmacologists, anesthesiologists, critical care nurses, and other healthcare professionals. Manuscripts may be either basic or clinical original investigations or review articles. Potential authors of review articles are encouraged to contact the editors before submission, however, unsolicited review articles will be considered.
February 2013 Critical Care Case of the Month: Thoracentesis Through the Looking Glass
Clement U. Singarajah MD
Jay E. Blum
Allen R. Thomas MD
Henry Luedy MD
Elijah Poulos MD
Tonya Whiting DO
Phoenix VA Medical Center
Phoenix, AZ
History of Present Illness
A 62 year old man was recently diagnosed with Stage 4 squamous cell left lung cancer with metastases to the pleura, brain and mediastinum. He also had known chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) with a FEV1 = 1.96 L and a known left side pleural effusion (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. Baseline chest radiograph showing left pleural effusion (red arrow).
He was seen as an outpatient for symptomatic shortness of breath and underwent real time ultrasound guided left sided thoracentesis removing 500 ml of straw-colored fluid. The procedure was uneventful except that near the end, the patient started to cough. He denied any symptoms post procedure apart from some minor puncture site pain. A routine post procedure chest x-ray was performed (Figure 2).
Figure 2. Post-thoracentesis x-ray (Panel A) and its negative image (Panel B).
What new abnormality is identified on the post-procedure chest x-ray?
- Left pneumothorax
- Right pneumothorax
- Lung “sliding” on the left
- New pneumonia in the left upper lobe
- Left hilar retraction
Reference as: Singarajah CU, Blum JE, Thomas AR, Luedy H, Poulos E, Whiting T. February 2013 critical care case of the month: thoracentesis through the looking glass. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2013;6(2):63-74. PDF