[Pulmonary and endobronchial tuberculosis with subclavian artery-pulmonary artery shunts].

Nihon Kyobu Shikkan Gakkai Zasshi

Department of Pulmonary Medicine, Otemachi Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan.

Published: March 1996

A 77-year-old woman with a productive cough and fever was admitted to the hospital. Pulmonary and endobronchial tuberculosis, pneumonia of the left upper lobe, and stenosis of the left main bronchus were diagnosed. She was given the antimycobacterial drugs isoniazid, rifampin, and streptomycin, and her condition improved. Two months later, bronchoscopy revealed semilunar-shaped stenosis of the left main bronchus, and auscultation revealed wheezing in the middle-end expiratory phase. A continuous flow murmur (Levine III) was also heard at the left anterior chest wall. Cardiac catheterization with subclavian arteriography revealed two left subclavian-pulmonary shunts. In a case of systemic-pulmonary shunt such as this, the bronchial stenosis could be surgically repaired, but the result would be an increase in dead space. If left untreated, the pulmonary hypertension would progress and symptoms of pulmonary disease would become more severe. Subclavian-pulmonary artery shunt is a very rare complication of pulmonary tuberculosis. Surgical treatment should consist of open bronchoplasty along with lobectomy and removal of the shunt, rather than embolization of the shunt and endoscopic bronchoplasty.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

endobronchial tuberculosis
8
stenosis left
8
left main
8
main bronchus
8
left
6
[pulmonary endobronchial
4
tuberculosis subclavian
4
subclavian artery-pulmonary
4
artery-pulmonary artery
4
artery shunts]
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!