0521779407-13 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:15
918 Low-Oxygen-Affinity Hemoglobins Lung Abscess
Specific Diagnostic Tests
■High P50, hemoglobin oxygen dissociation curve shifted to the right
■Some cases may be detected on hemoglobin electrophoresis
differential diagnosis
■Methemoglobinemia
■Cyanosis secondary to cardiac or pulmonary disorders
management
■No therapy.
specific therapy
n/a
follow-up
n/a
complications and prognosis
■No associated morbidity or mortality.
LUNG ABSCESS
STEVEN R. HAYS, MD
history & physical
History & Risk Factors
■May be associated with infections caused by pyogenic bacteria,
mycobacterium, fungi and parasites
■Anaerobic infection most common cause, up to 90% of cases
■Aspiration biggest risk factor, often associated with periodontal dis-
ease
■Predisposing conditions (73% of patients have at least one):
➣Loss of cough reflex: alcoholism, seizure disorder, drug overdose,
general anesthesia, protracted vomiting
➣Neurologic disorders: cerebrovascular disease, myasthenia
gravis, amyotropic lateral sclerosis, other bulbar processes
➣Poor deglutination associated with neurologic disorders or eso-
phageal disease
■May complicate:
➣Primary or metastatic malignancy as postobstructive pneu-
monia; 8–18% of abscesses have associated malignancy
➣Pulmonary infarctions