In cases of profound hypoxemia and erythrocytosis the differential diagnosis must include a persistent left superior vena cava with anomalous connection to the left atrium. Trans-thoracic and transoesophageal contrast-echocardiography is a simple and reliable method to diagnose persistent left superior vena cava as well as concomitant cardiac anomalies.
Correct pre-therapeutic T4 staging is mandatory for neo-adjuvant studies and for the decision on surgical therapy of high-risk patients. T4-staging of centrally located lung-cancer by means of non-invasive imaging techniques is either of low accuracy (CT and NMR) or important regions are not accessible due to air interference with the tracheo-bronchial tree (trans-esophageal-endosonography, TEE). We here describe for the first time the new technique of mediastinoscopic ultrasonography (MUS). A fingertip ultrasound probe is introduced through the video-mediastinoscope. The probe lies in front of the tracheo-bronchial tree and in direct contact with the vena cava and pulmonary artery. This position allows examining those regions that are not accessible with TEE. In a pilot study with 12 patients, visualization of central vessels and their relation to the tumor was excellent and without artifacts. In 3 patients, MUS did not confirm the T4 stage predicted by CT Scan. Those three patients underwent successful pneumonectomy (R0-resection) while the other nine patients received induction treatment. MUS is a promising addition to CT scanning, NMR, and transesophageal ultrasound in staging of centrally located tumors.
Echocardiography, in conjunction with the clinical findings, provides a firm foundation for successfully treating Löffler's endocarditis. In selected cases cardiac surgery can markedly improve the course.
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