• Chest · Feb 2022

    Case Reports

    Longstanding Phenytoin Use as a Cause of Progressive Dyspnea.

    • Alexander Walker, Arashdeep Rupal, Chinmay Jani, Omar Al Omari, Harpreet Singh, Dipesh Patel, Carmen Perrino, and Jessica McCannon.
    • Department of Medicine, Mount Auburn Hospital, Cambridge, MA; Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA. Electronic address: alexander.walker@mah.harvard.edu.
    • Chest. 2022 Feb 1; 161 (2): e91-e96.

    Case PresentationA 54-year-old South African man with a medical history of type 2 diabetes mellitus, seizure disorder, OSA, and latent TB presented to the ER with gradually progressive dyspnea over months. He also reported occasional dry cough and fatigue at presentation but denied fever, chills, chest pain, leg swelling, palpitations, or lightheadedness. He was treated with a course of levofloxacin for presumed community-acquired pneumonia as an outpatient without improvement and had tested negative for COVID-19. He denied occupational or environmental exposures or sick contacts, though he had traveled back to South Africa 1 year before presentation. He had complex partial seizures for the past 22 years, which had been well controlled on phenytoin (300 mg daily). His other home medications included dulaglutide, sertraline, and atorvastatin and had no recent changes. He quit smoking 30 years ago after smoking one pack per day for 10 years.Copyright © 2021 American College of Chest Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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