Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:57


1186 Pleural Tumors Pneumothorax

follow-up
■Most follow-up is directed at the specific disease
■Benign fibrous mesothelioma, because of late recurrences, should
have annual Chest X-ray
complications and prognosis
■Malignant mesothelioma:
➣Median Survival:
Stage I (resectable without LN involvement): 22 months
Stage II (resectable with LN involvement): 17 months
Stage III (unresectable): 11 months
■Benign Fibrous Mesothelioma:
➣90% cure; 10% recurrence (may occur late)
■Primary Effusion Lymphoma:
➣Survival: 4–6 months
■Metastatic Pleural Disease
➣Mean survival with positive cytology=3 months
➣Effusion decreases with chemotherapy in 40% of breast and 35%
of small cell cancers

PNEUMOTHORAX


MESHELL D. JOHNSON, MD


history & physical
History
■Spontaneous pneumothorax (ptx)
■Primary – no underlying lung disease
➣Incidence 18 /100,000 in men, 6/100,000 in women
➣Usually tall, thin males 10–30 years old; uncommon over 40;
4:1 male predominance; cigarette smoking increases rate
■Secondary – history of underlying COPD, emphysema, cystic fibrosis,
status asthmaticus, PCP, necrotizing pneumonias, sarcoidosis, IPF,
EG, LAM, tuberous sclerosis, connective tissue disease, Marfan’s,
Ehlers-Danlos, cancer, thoracic endometriosis
➣Incidence 6/100,000 in men, 2/100,000 in women; in COPD, inci-
dence is 26/100,000
➣Peak incidence 60–65 years of age
■Traumatic ptx – penetrating or blunt chest injury (rib fracture, bron-
chial rupture, esophageal injury)
■Iatrogenic ptx – transthoracic needle aspiration, central line, thora-
centesis, pleural biopsy, positive pressure ventilation
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