[HTML][HTML] Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Secondary to Radiotherapy for Breast Cancer: A Case Report

JB Alhaddad, JZ Bleibel, M Hoteit, SB Harb… - The American Journal …, 2020 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
JB Alhaddad, JZ Bleibel, M Hoteit, SB Harb, YB Haddad
The American Journal of Case Reports, 2020ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Objective: Unusual or unexpected effect of treatment Background: Radiotherapy is often
used as an adjuvant therapy in breast cancer following surgical resection of the primary
malignant tumor. It has multiple respiratory side effects, but acute respiratory distress
syndrome (ARDS) is a rare complication. We describe here the case of a woman with breast
cancer who developed ARDS 1 week after her final radiotherapy session. Case Report: A 69-
year-old female with breast cancer presented 1 week after her final session of radiotherapy …
Objective:
Unusual or unexpected effect of treatment
Background:
Radiotherapy is often used as an adjuvant therapy in breast cancer following surgical resection of the primary malignant tumor. It has multiple respiratory side effects, but acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a rare complication. We describe here the case of a woman with breast cancer who developed ARDS 1 week after her final radiotherapy session.
Case Report:
A 69-year-old female with breast cancer presented 1 week after her final session of radiotherapy. She had developed a sudden onset of hypotension unresponsive to fluids, oxygen desaturation unresponsive to high flow oxygen, and new bilateral infiltrates had appeared on chest x-ray (CXR) predominant in the left upper lobe, which was interestingly the main area affected by the radiotherapy beams. A diagnosis of atypical ARDS secondary to radiotherapy was established. She was intubated and a low tidal volume/high positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) strategy was utilized to manage her condition. After 48 hours, the infiltrates diminished remarkably, and she was extubated the following day. On discharge, she had a completely normal CXR; a computed tomography (CT) chest performed 1 month later showed complete resolution of the alveolar opacities.
Conclusions:
ARDS remains an extremely rare complication of thoracic radiotherapy. However, physicians must be wary of its development in order to diagnose it quickly and treat accordingly.
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果

Google学术搜索按钮

example.edu/paper.pdf
查找
获取 PDF 文件
引用
References