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Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska/Polish Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
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vol. 12
 
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Case report

Tension pneumothorax as a severe complication of endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial fine needle aspiration of mediastinal lymph nodes

Maciej Gnass
,
Artur Szlubowski
,
Tomasz Gil
,
Piotr Kocoń
,
Mirosław Ziętkiewicz
,
Magdalena Twardowska
,
Jarosław Kużdżał

Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska 2015; 12 (4): 359-362
Online publish date: 2015/12/30
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Introduction

The most widely accepted method of minimally invasive diagnostics for mediastinal lymph node enlargement in the course of lung cancer and sarcoidosis is endobronchial ultrasonography (EBUS), which has been in use for over a decade [1, 2]. In cases in which imaging of the posterior mediastinum and the left adrenal gland is required, the examination can be supplemented with endoesophageal ultrasonography (EUS) [3]. The joint examination, known as combined ultrasonography (CUS), was initially performed using two devices (a bronchofiberoscope and a gastrofiberoscope) equipped with a sector ultrasound transducer. At present, the most popular method is CUSb, which employs a single bronchofiberoscope; this significantly reduces the duration of the examination and the cost associated with the procedure without having a significant impact on the diagnostic efficacy of the method [4, 5]. The most important advantage of the described diagnostic methods is that needle aspiration can be performed in real time under ultrasound control, providing cytological material for histopathological assessment.
The combined ultrasound-needle aspiration (CUSb-NA) examination is considered relatively safe and is well tolerated by the patients when short-term analgesia and sedation is administered intravenously [2, 5]. The relevant complications that are most often described in the literature are infectious complications after endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) [6, 7].
The incidence of EBUS-TBNA complications in the largest survey study conducted by the Japan Society for Respiratory Endoscopy was estimated at 1.23%; the most common complications were harmless self-limiting bleeding (0.68%) and infectious complications (0.14%). The latter included mediastinitis, pneumonia, pericarditis, infections after cyst puncture, and even sepsis [8]. Pneumothorax as a complication of EBUS-TBNA was diagnosed in only 2 patients out of over seven thousand examined (0.03%), and only one of these patients required pleural drainage [8]. In the largest American study, ACCP AQuIRE (American College of Chest Physicians Quality Improvement Registry, Education), which included 1317 patients, the incidence of complications after EBUS-TBNA was 1.44%; pneumothorax occurred in as many as 7 patients, in most cases after lung biopsy with the EBUS-TBNA method [9]. One case of pneumothorax has been described as a major complication after CUS-NA performed during the only randomized study comparing the efficacy of echosonography with mediastinoscopy [10].

Case study

The 63-year-old male patient with diagnosis of infiltrative lesions of the left lung and hilum as well as mediastinal lymphadenopathy (Fig. 1) and suspicion of hyperplasia was admitted to the Clinical Department of Thoracic Surgery of the John Paul II Specialist Hospital in Krakow for histopathological verification. The patient’s medical history included chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and bullous emphysema of both lungs; seven years earlier, he underwent left-sided upper lobectomy due to the presence of non-neoplastic cysts. Infiltration of the left hilar area and the mediastinal lymph node packets were revealed by a chest computed tomography (CT) scan performed in July, 2013 at the Department of Pulmonology, where the patient was hospitalized due to COPD exacerbation with bronchogenic inflammation of the right lung. In the course of further diagnostics, an out-patient positron emission tomography–computed tomography (PET-CT) examination was performed, revealing moderate metabolic stimulation (SUV 3.5-6.2) of the infiltrative-atelectatic lesions of the left lung and mediastinal lymph nodes: group 4R (right lower paratracheal) and group 7 (subcarinal).
The CUSb examination performed in August, 2013 confirmed the presence of perihilar infiltration of the lower lobe of the left lung (visible on both the EBUS and the EUS image). However, due to the fibrosis and rotation of the lower lung bronchial openings, EBUS-TBNA was not performed as the lesion was outside the reach of the biopsy needle. Group 7 lymph node biopsy was performed, and the procedure was uneventful. Cytological assessment did not demonstrate the presence of neoplastic cells.
In September 2013, the patient was readmitted to the Clinical Department of Chest Surgery due to persisting radiological changes in the left lung and mediastinal lymph node enlargement. The patient again underwent a CUSb-NA examination, and material for cytological investigation was obtained from the lymph nodes (group 7 – with EUS-FNA, and group 4R – with EBUS-TBNA; Fig. 2).
During the examination and immediately after, the patient reported no complaints. No saturation drop was observed in pulse oximetry. After the examination, the patient was transferred from the Endoscopy Unit to the ward. Approximately 30 min after the end of the endoscopic examination, the patient reported sudden pain in the right half of the chest, accompanied by dyspnea. Physical examination revealed tachypnea, no alveolar murmur above the right side of the chest, and tympanitic resonance. The obtained chest radiogram visualized right-sided pneumothorax and mediastinal displacement to the left (Fig. 3). During the diagnostic examinations, the patient’s condition deteriorated: he lost consciousness, his arterial blood pressure dropped to 50/20 mmHg, and his heart rate slowed to 30 bpm (bradycardia). A drain was immediately inserted into the right pleural cavity, and suction drainage was applied, resulting in swift improvement of the patient’s condition. Further radiograms confirmed full expansion of the right lung (Fig. 4). The drain was removed on the 4th day; on the next day, the patient was discharged home in good general condition.

Discussion

Methods of endoscopic echosonography are safe for patients [1-5, 10]. According to the largest publications, the incidence of all complications is approximately 1-1.5% [8, 9]. Most major complications are associated with the needle aspiration [9]. The most common ones include inflammatory complications (mediastinitis, pneumonia, pericarditis), bleeding complications (bleeding into the lumen of the bronchial tree or into the mediastinum), pneumothorax, and mediastinal emphysema. Most often, the complications pose no threat to the patient’s life [6-10].
Pneumothorax may result from injury of the pulmonary pleura of a previously unchanged lung or from an accidental puncture of an emphysematous bulla during the needle biopsy. In patients with bullous emphysema, this complication may occur as a result of a spontaneous rupture of an emphysematous bulla, caused by an increase of pressure in the chest resulting from strenuous cough during bronchofiberoscopy.
In the present case, the emphysematous bullae adhered directly to the group 4 lymph nodes biopsied during the second CUSb examination, as shown in Figure 5.
The management strategy in view of diagnosed emphysema depends on the lesion’s size and the clinical condition of the patient. If the emphysema is small, and the patient’s condition is stable, it is sufficient to employ passive oxygen therapy and monitor the size of the emphysematous chamber. Patients with larger emphysemas require suction drainage of the pleural cavity. In the case of tension pneumothorax, introducing a drain into the pleural cavity is a life-saving procedure and must be performed immediately after diagnosis.
Pneumothorax is a particularly rare complication after echosonography [8-10]. Nonetheless, the possibility of its occurrence must be taken into account; patients should be monitored during the first hours after the procedure, and their complaints, such as chest pain, dyspnea, or cough, should be addressed immediately. Delaying the diagnosis and, consequently, the implementation of appropriate treatment, may have dire consequences for the patient. Therefore, it appears justified to monitor patients after EBUS/EUS procedures for at least 24 hours in order to minimize the risk to their lives. It is also of paramount importance to identify patients burdened with a higher risk of complications (e.g. with advanced emphysema, as in the case of the present patient) before the procedure and to carefully monitor such patients after the procedure is completed.

Disclosure

Authors report no conflict of interest.

References

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Copyright: © 2015 Polish Society of Cardiothoracic Surgeons (Polskie Towarzystwo KardioTorakochirurgów) and the editors of the Polish Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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