Pulmonary

The Southwest Journal of Pulmonary and Critical Care publishes articles broadly related to pulmonary medicine including thoracic surgery, transplantation, airways disease, pediatric pulmonology, anesthesiolgy, pharmacology, nursing  and more. 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.

Rick Robbins, M.D. Rick Robbins, M.D.

March 2015 Pulmonary Case of the Month: Sticks and Stones May Break My Bronchi

Syed Amer MBBS

Kenneth Sakata MD

Karen Swanson DO

 

Department of Pulmonary Medicine

Mayo Clinic Arizona

Scottsdale, AZ

 

History of Present Illness

A 67-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with a chief complaint of persistent cough of 2 months duration, productive of yellow sputum. Her symptoms progressed to include dyspnea despite an outpatient course of antibiotics, bronchodilators, and corticosteroids. She denied fevers, chills, hemoptysis, or chest pain. 

PMH, FH, SH

She was on chronic immunosuppression secondary to a history of liver transplant due to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis and kidney transplant due to calcineurin toxicity. She denied any history of smoking, alcoholism or recreational drug use.  

Medications

  • Tacrolimus 3.5 mg bid
  • Mycophenolate mofetil 720 mg bid
  • Fluconazole 100 mg daily

Physical Examination

Vitals: Temperature 37.1°C, respiratory rate 18 breaths/min, heart rate 88 beats/min, blood pressure 130/76 mm Hg, SpO2 95% on room air.

General: Elderly female in no apparent distress.

Lungs: Scattered inspiratory and expiratory squeaks and pops bilaterally, louder in the left lower lobe

The rest of her exam was within normal limits

Laboratory

WBC 4.8 x 103 cells/µL, Hemoglobin 8.0 g/dL, Hematocrit 23.5, Platelets 122 x 103 cells/µL.

Creatinine 1.3, electrolytes, blood urea nitrogen, glucose were within normal limits.

Radiography

Her admission chest x-ray is presented in Figure 1.

Figure 1. Admission chest radiograph.

Which of the following is (are) appropriate at this time? (Click on the correct answer to proceed to the second of 4 panels)

  1. Cocci serology
  2. Empirically begin antibiotics
  3. Thoracic CT scan
  4. Sputum culture
  5. All of the above

Reference as: Amer S, Sakata K, Swanson K. March 2015 pulmonary case of the month: sticks and stones may break my bronchi. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2015:10(3):99-104. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc026-15 PDF 

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