IPLab:Lab 3:Foreign Body Granuloma
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Clinical SummaryEdit
This 21-year-old black male suffered a gunshot wound to his right chest. A thoracotomy revealed multiple bleeding points in the middle and lower lobe of the right lung and significant hemorrhage from an intercostal artery. A portion of the right middle lobe was removed. The patient's post-operative course was complicated by Gram-negative pneumonia and significant neurologic dysfunction, apparently the result of emboli from iliofemoral venous thrombosis. All were treated without sequelae.
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Study QuestionsEdit
Additional ResourcesEdit
ReferenceEdit
- eMedicine Medical Library: Opioid Abuse
- Merck Manual: Opioids: Drug Use and Dependence
- Merck Manual: Occupational Asthma
Journal ArticlesEdit
- Nan DN, Fernández-Ayala M, Iglesias L, García-Palomo D, Parra JA, Fariñas MC. Talc granulomatosis. A differential diagnosis of interstitial lung disease in HIV patients. Chest 2000 Jul;118(1):258-60.
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Related IPLab CasesEdit
A thoracotomy is a surgical procedure in which an opening is made in the chest wall.
In alcoholics, aspiration pneumonia is common--bacteria enter the lung via aspiration of gastric contents.
Plural of embolus. An embolus is something that blocks the blood flow in a blood vessel. It may be a gas bubble, a blood clot, a fat globule, a mass of bacteria, or other foreign body. It usually forms somewhere else and travels through the circulatory system until it gets stuck.
Thrombosis occurring in the deep veins of the legs is a common sequela seen post-operatively.