Ecstasy ingestion has life-threatening effects such as hyperpyrexia, rhabdomyolysis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, coma, and death. In the present report, we aimed to highlight ecstasy as a rare cause of spontaneous pneumomediastinum and its potential lifethreatening effects. A 16-year-old female with dyspnea and chest pain presented to the emergency department. Chest computed tomography demonstrated pneumomediastinum at the level of the thoracic inlet and upper and posterior mediastinum. The patient was admitted to the thoracic surgery department with a preliminary diagnosis of spontaneous pneumomediastinum. She refused to answer any questions during the first visit, an a psychiatric consultation was requested. The most important finding of psychiatric consultation was ecstasy abuse, which could not be identified in the emergency department evaluation. Four days later, the symptoms resolved completely and control chest X-rays showed no complications; therefore, the patient was discharged. While investigating the etiology of spontaneous mediastinum, particularly in a young, healthy patient, ecstasy abuse should always be considered. Because the fatal complications that may develop due to ecstasy ingestion may be overlooked.
KEY WORDS: Pneumomediastinum, ecstasy, dyspnea
INRODUCTIONSpontaneous pneumomediastinum (SPM) is the existence of free air within the mediastinum without any known precipitating events, such as trauma, surgery, or medical procedures. Although it is a rare, usually benign, and self-limited condition, it is very important to detect the causes that trigger pneumomediastinum, such as exacerbation of asthma, tobacco, use of inhaled drugs, corticosteroids, emesis, cough, physical exercise, labor, and also abuse of recreational drugs such as cocaine and ecstasy [1,2].
CASE PRESENTATIONA 16-year-old female living in an orphanage presented to the emergency department with dyspnea and chest pain. Physical examination, electrocardiogram, routine laboratory tests, and chest radiograph were all unremarkable. Chest computed tomography established pneumomediastinum at the level of the thoracic inlet and upper and posterior mediastinum (Figure 1). The patient was evaluated by a general surgeon, otolaryngologist, gastroenterologist, and thoracic surgeon. Endoscopic evaluations (esophagoscopy, laryngoscopy, and bronchoscopy) revealed no esophageal or upper respiratory tract pathologies. The patient was admitted to the thoracic surgery department with a preliminary diagnosis of SPM for follow-up. The vital signs were stable (blood pressure: 120/74 mmHg, pulse rate: 74 beats/min, temperature: 36.5°C, respiratory rate: 20 breaths/min, oxygen saturation: 95%). The patient refused to communicate with the doctor or answer any questions during the first visit, and psychiatric consultation was requested. Psychiatric consultation revealed that the patient had been placed in the orphanage 3 years ago. Since then, she would become angry at everything and damage her surroundings; she was therefore taking antidep...