Please do not put a chest drain in my chest! Vanishing lung syndrome

Introduction: Vanishing lung syndrome, also known as giant bullous emphysema is a condition usually reported in young male thin smokers. There are numerous case reports that have added to the body of evidence. There are also case reports of the giant bulla being misinterpreted for a pneumothorax. Ca...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Avinash Aujayeb
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-12-01
Series:African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X20300203
id doaj-7fe98be6d67940f59bcc3ef96088eea6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7fe98be6d67940f59bcc3ef96088eea62020-11-27T04:20:14ZengElsevierAfrican Journal of Emergency Medicine2211-419X2020-12-01104261265Please do not put a chest drain in my chest! Vanishing lung syndromeAvinash Aujayeb0Corresponding author.; Acute Medicine Department, The Northumbria Specialist Emergency Care Hospital, Northumbria Way, Cramlington NE23 6NZIntroduction: Vanishing lung syndrome, also known as giant bullous emphysema is a condition usually reported in young male thin smokers. There are numerous case reports that have added to the body of evidence. There are also case reports of the giant bulla being misinterpreted for a pneumothorax. Case report: A 61 year old male with severe chronic obstructive lung disease presented to Accident and Emergency with progressive breathlessness. A chest radiograph showed a giant right sided bulla that was initially misinterpreted as a tension pneumothorax. Further review of his imaging and lung function pointed to him having vanishing lung syndrome. He was referred for a cardiothoracic opinion but was eventually managed conservatively. Discussion: Vanishing lung syndrome is characterised by a slowly enlarging upper lobe bulla that compresses normal lung parenchyma and causes mediastinal shift, with the patients experiencing increasing dyspnoea and reduced exercise tolerance. Smoking cessation is the mainstay of treatment. If they are relatively asymptomatic, patients are managed conservatively. Otherwise a variety of lung volume reduction techniques can be considered. A large bulla can look the same as a pneumothorax but the former does not have a lung edge and has a more rounded appearance. A CT scan is very useful in differentiating between the two pathologies. Bullae are predominantly caused by smoking. Bullae will cause high total lung volumes and residual volumes, but low alveolar volumes. Bullae can be observed or treated by surgical techniqueshttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X20300203
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Avinash Aujayeb
spellingShingle Avinash Aujayeb
Please do not put a chest drain in my chest! Vanishing lung syndrome
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
author_facet Avinash Aujayeb
author_sort Avinash Aujayeb
title Please do not put a chest drain in my chest! Vanishing lung syndrome
title_short Please do not put a chest drain in my chest! Vanishing lung syndrome
title_full Please do not put a chest drain in my chest! Vanishing lung syndrome
title_fullStr Please do not put a chest drain in my chest! Vanishing lung syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Please do not put a chest drain in my chest! Vanishing lung syndrome
title_sort please do not put a chest drain in my chest! vanishing lung syndrome
publisher Elsevier
series African Journal of Emergency Medicine
issn 2211-419X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Introduction: Vanishing lung syndrome, also known as giant bullous emphysema is a condition usually reported in young male thin smokers. There are numerous case reports that have added to the body of evidence. There are also case reports of the giant bulla being misinterpreted for a pneumothorax. Case report: A 61 year old male with severe chronic obstructive lung disease presented to Accident and Emergency with progressive breathlessness. A chest radiograph showed a giant right sided bulla that was initially misinterpreted as a tension pneumothorax. Further review of his imaging and lung function pointed to him having vanishing lung syndrome. He was referred for a cardiothoracic opinion but was eventually managed conservatively. Discussion: Vanishing lung syndrome is characterised by a slowly enlarging upper lobe bulla that compresses normal lung parenchyma and causes mediastinal shift, with the patients experiencing increasing dyspnoea and reduced exercise tolerance. Smoking cessation is the mainstay of treatment. If they are relatively asymptomatic, patients are managed conservatively. Otherwise a variety of lung volume reduction techniques can be considered. A large bulla can look the same as a pneumothorax but the former does not have a lung edge and has a more rounded appearance. A CT scan is very useful in differentiating between the two pathologies. Bullae are predominantly caused by smoking. Bullae will cause high total lung volumes and residual volumes, but low alveolar volumes. Bullae can be observed or treated by surgical techniques
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X20300203
work_keys_str_mv AT avinashaujayeb pleasedonotputachestdraininmychestvanishinglungsyndrome
_version_ 1724414259631226880