Lung herniation has been defined as a protrusion of lung tissue through its bounding structure. We present a case of spontaneous intercostal lung herniation following bouts of cough, which was complicated by multiple rib fractures, in which we had to adopt a non-surgical approach due to the clinical circumstance. Its understanding in the field of internal medicine is important as appropriate therapeutic judgment, and long-term follow-up is essential for full recovery.
Introduction
Primary cardiac lymphoma accounts for <2% of all primary cardiac tumours. It is uncommon in immunocompetent patients, often fatal and diagnosed at autopsy. Tumour usually involves the right heart chambers and pericardium. With advances in imaging, early diagnosis is possible and treatment including chemotherapy and surgery affords good prognosis.
Case presentation
We present a 50-year-old woman with abdominal pain and fevers for 5 days. Computed tomography of the abdomen showed splenic and renal infarcts but no mass or vegetation was noted on echocardiography. Thoracic computed tomography divulged a large left ventricular filling defect. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging delineated a 3.5 × 4.5 cm anterobasal mass with frond-like projections and endocardial invasion without extracardiac involvement suggestive of a low-vascularity tumour. Echo-guided endomyocardial biopsy and minithoracotomy with needle biopsy were inconclusive. A sarcoid-protocol cardiac positron emission tomography-fluorodeoxyglucose scan showed focally elevated uptake in the basal anteroseptum without extracardiac uptake, supporting a malignant entity. This prompted open heart mass resection. Pathology revealed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.
Discussion
Our case is a unique report of cardiac lymphoma isolated to the left ventricle. Location of the tumour and lack of specific imaging characteristics made it a diagnostic challenge. It underscores the importance of including lymphoma in the differential for intracardiac masses as it is responsive to chemotherapy. Additionally, it emphasizes the complementary role of imaging modalities and multidisciplinary team approach in diagnosis. Early diagnosis and therapy is the key to establishing successful outcomes.
Catheter induced cardiac arrhythmia is a well-known complication encountered during pulmonary artery or cardiac catheterization. Injury to the cardiac conducting system often involves the right bundle branch which in a patient with preexisting left bundle branch block can lead to fatal arrhythmia including asystole. Such a complication during central venous cannulation is rare as it usually does not enter the heart. The guide wire or the cannula itself can cause such an injury during central venous cannulation. The length of the guide wire, its rigidity, and lack of set guidelines for its insertion make it theoretically more prone to cause such an injury. We report a case of LBBB that went into transient complete heart block following guide wire insertion during a central venous cannulation procedure.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.