The first case of acute renal infarction in a patient with heavy marijuana smoking is described. The patient had no concomitant previous medical history. There was no evidence of a primary or secondary hypercoagulable state. Underlying neoplasm was excluded. Recovery was associated with normalization of transaminases and lactic dehydrogenase but with a persistent triangular hypoechogenic area in the right kidney. The combination of marijuana-associated alterations in systemic blood pressure due to peripheral vasodilation, functional anemia and an adrenergic effect might have been the cause of the arteria renalis thrombosis in our patient, but the real underlying pathophysiological mechanism still remains unresolved.
Lung abscess due to nontyphoid Salmonella (NTS) with or without other intestinal or extra-intestinal involvement is very rare. A literature review (Medline search) revealed only 20 cases including ours with this extra-intestinal manifestation of Salmonella infection. The case of a 49-year-old, HIV-positive man from Zaire is reported. Diagnosis was established by direct transthoracal CT-guided puncture of the abscess, a hitherto not reported procedure in this setting. Treatment with oral ciprofloxacin resulted in clinical and radiographic improvement. Underlying immunodeficiency seems to play an important role, but the real pathophysiological mechanisms remain unsolved. It is particularly seen in HIV-positive patients with impaired cellular immunity since Salmonella is an intracellular pathogen whose eradication involves natural killer cells and antibody-induced cellular cytotoxicity. A possible explanation is that NT-Salmonella bacteraemia is much more frequent in AIDS-patients as compared to the general population. Salmonella bacteraemia can then spread to other tissues and organs such as the lungs, but why only the lungs are involved in some cases remains unclear. The characteristics of Salmonella lung abscess is discussed and the literature reviewed.
Chronic liver disease is well known to be associated with pulmonary abnormalities. Hypoxemia, clubbing, cyanosis and hyperventilation are common. The hypoxemia in cirrhotic patients has several causes: diffuse shunts due to intrapulmonary arteriolar vasodilatation, impaired hypoxic vasoconstriction, impaired matching of ventilation to perfusion, pleural effusions and diaphragmatic dysfunction. Because of gravity, shifting of blood to the dilated precapillary beds of the lung bases results in an increased hypoxemic dyspnea when the patient is in the upright position, also known as orthodeoxia and platypnea. It has only been described in 5% of the cirrhotic patients and has not been described in a Belgian refereed journal (Medline literature search 1983-Aug 1993). It should be considered in the initial differential diagnosis of hypoxemia in patients with liver cirrhosis and dyspnea. Measuring arterial blood gases in the lying and upright position can prevent further invasive investigations, and whole body nuclide scan with technetium-99m macroaggregated albumin can confirm the diagnosis. Standard therapy with spironolactone (Aldactone) can worsen the condition and we found no additional benefit of beta-antagonists (propranolol/Inderal) in the reduction of the shunt fraction, probably because the main reason for the shunting is precapillary vasodilatation. Since there are no anatomical porto-pulmonary shunts, surgery is also inappropriate. The only therapy consists of oxygen supplements and low dose diuretics in patients with edema.
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