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.

April 2015 Pulmonary Case of the Month: Get Down

Michael Pham, MD

Karen Swanson, DO

Department of Pulmonary Medicine

Mayo Clinic Arizona

Scottsdale, AZ

 

History of Present Illness

A 59 year old woman was admitted with hypercapnic respiratory failure and an altered mental state. She had progressive “breathing issues” for the last year and was  increasingly error prone with decreased mental acuity at the end of her work shift for the last 6 months. She was on oxygen at 2 L by nasal cannula at home and has had several admissions over the last 3 months for hypercapnic respiratory failure.

Past Medical History

Obstructive sleep apnea with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) intolerance, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and fibromyalgia. She is a life-long nonsmoker.

Physical Examination

Vital signs: T 36.9º C, P 116 beats/min, R 42 breaths/min, BP 134/80 mm Hg, SpO2 93% on room air.

General: She appeared very short of breath.

Neck: No jugular venous distention.

Lungs: Clear anteriorly.

Heart: RR with a tachycardia. 

Abdomen: no organomegaly or masses.

Neurologic:

  • +3-to-4 of 5 strength upper and lower extremities
  • Difficulty holding upright posture
  • Decreased sensation in lower extremities
  • R > L lower extremity gastrocnemial fasciculations
  • Hand asterixis/tremor bilaterally
  • Decreased DTRs diffusely

Laboratory

ABG's: pH 7.3 / CO2 82 / pO2 77. Following 4 hours CPAP: pH 7.4 / CO2 68 / pO2 80

Basic metabolic panel: Na+ 138 | Cl- 86 | Creatinine 0.4

                                         K+ 4.8 | TCO2 44 | BUN 13

                                         Ca++ 4.9 / PO4- 4.1 / Mg++ 1.9

Complete blood count: WBC 11.9 cells/mm3, Hemoglobin 10.8 g/dL

Liver function tests, ammonia and lactate were all normal.

 

Radiography

Admission chest x-ray is shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1. Admission chest x-ray.

Which of the following is/are true regarding the chest x-ray? (Click on the correct answer to proceed to the second of four panels)

  1. Elevated right hemidiaphragm
  2. Right pleural effusion
  3. Volume loss in the right hemithorax
  4. 1 and 3
  5. All of the above

Reference as: Pham M, Swanson K. April 2015 pulmonary case of the month: get down. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2015;10(4):152-8. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc040-15 PDF

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

January 2015 Pulmonary Case of the Month: More Red Wine, Every Time

Uzair Ghori, MD (UGhori@salud.unm.edu)

Shozab Ahmed, MD  (Sahmed@salud.unm.edu)

University of New Mexico

Albuquerque, New Mexico

 

History of Present Illness

A 41-year-old man travelling from Texas to Las Vegas, Nevada presents to the Emergency Room in Albuquerque, New Mexico with petechial rash, photophobia and headache of 2 weeks duration. The patient complains of general malaise, arthralgia, trouble sleeping, shortness of breath associated with cough and intermittent bilateral lower extremity swelling of 3 weeks duration.

PMH, SH & FH

The patient was prescribed lisinopril and metformin for hypertension and diabetes mellitus, respectively. He admitted occasional drinking, smoking a variable quantity for 30 years but currently not smoking. He denied any illicit drug use.

Physical Exam

Vitals: Heart Rate-92, Blood Pressure-116/45 mm Hg, Respiratory Rate-44 breaths/min, Temperature- 37.2ºC, SpO2-98% on non-rebreather mask.

General: His mental status was not altered.

HEENT: No papilledema was appreciated on eye exam.

Neck: JVP not appreciated.

Lungs: he had diminished breath sounds bilaterally on auscultation.

Heart: His heart had a regular rate and rhythm with no murmurs rubs or gallops.

Abdomen: No abdominal distention or lower extremity edema appreciated.

Skin: A petechial rash was noted most prominently in the lower extremities.

Based on the initial presentation the most appropriate investigations would be? (Click on the correct answer to proceed to the 2nd of 6 panels)

  1. CBC, CT head, echocardiogram, blood cultures, metabolic panel, inflammatory markers
  2. CBC, UA, lumbar puncture, chest x-ray, inflammatory markers, metabolic panel
  3. Echocardiogram, CBC, UA, venous blood gases, bronchoscopy, CT head
  4. Stress test, CXR, inflammatory markers, lumbar puncture, ultrasound abdomen, metabolic panel
  5. UA, lumbar Puncture, bronchoscopy, echocardiogram, CT head, inflammatory markers 

Reference as: Ghori U, Ahmed S. January 2015 pulmonary case of the month: more red wine, every time. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2015;10(1):1-7. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc155-14 PDF

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