Affiliation:
1. Clinical Hospital Center “Zemun”, Department of Pulmology, Belgrade
2. Department of Cardiology, Clinical Hospital Center “Zemun”, Belgrade
3. Clinical Hospital Center “Zemun”, Department of Cardiology, Belgrade + Faculty of Medicine, Belgrade
Abstract
Introduction. Rapidly vanishing lung pseudotumor (phantom tumor) refers to
the transient well-demarcated accumulation of pleural fluid in the interlobar
pulmonary fissures. Most frequently their appearance is associated with
congestive heart failure, but also other disorders like hypoalbuminemia,
renal insufficiency or pleuritis. Its rapid disappearance in response to the
treatment of the underlying disorder is a classical feature of this clinical
entity. Case report. A 47-yearold woman, chronic smoker with symptoms of
shortness of breath, orthopnea, chills, cough, weakness and the temperature
of 39.2?C was admitted to our hospital. A posteroanterior chest X-ray
revealed cardiomegaly with the cardiothoracic ratio of > 0.5, blunting of
both costophrenic angles and an adjacent 6 x 5 cm well-defined, rounded
opacity in the right interlobar fissure. Transthoracic 2-dimensional
echocardiography demonstrated left ventricular hyperthrophy with a systolic
ejection fraction of 25% and moderate mitral regurgitation. The patient?s
symptoms resolved rapidly after diuresis, and repeated chest X-ray four days
later showed that the right lung opacity and pleural effusions had vanished.
Conclusion. The presented case underlines the importance of the possibility
of vanishing lung tumor in patients with left ventricular failure and a sharp
oval lung mass on the chest X-ray. This is the way to avoid incorrect
interpretation of this finding causing additional, unnecessary, costly or
invasive imaging, interventions and drugs.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),General Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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