• Chest · Mar 2018

    Case Reports

    A 24-Year-Old Woman With Precipitous Respiratory Failure After Lung Transplantation.

    • Whittney A Warren, Domingo Franco-Palacios, Christopher S King, Oksana A Shlobin, Steven D Nathan, Shalika B Katugaha, Haresh Mani, and A Whitney Brown.
    • Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care, Walter Reed Military Medical Center, Bethesda, MD. Electronic address: Whittney.Warren@gmail.com.
    • Chest. 2018 Mar 1; 153 (3): e53-e56.

    Case PresentationA 24-year-old woman with ΔF508/Y1092X cystic fibrosis (CF) complicated by severe obstructive lung disease (FEV1 of 30% predicted) was admitted for IV antibiotics for planned sinus surgery resulting from severe chronic sinusitis causing frequent exacerbations and declining lung function. She had persistent airway infection with multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, and growth of a fungus presumed to be an airway colonizer, identified as Stephanoascus ciferrii 1 year before presentation. Two days after surgery, she developed acute respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation. On day 4 of mechanical ventilation, venovenous-extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO) was initiated for refractory respiratory failure. The following day, she was listed for bilateral lung transplant and was transplanted 4 days later. Following transplantation, she was decannulated from ECMO; however, over the next 12 hours, oxygenation deteriorated requiring reinstitution of VV-ECMO for presumed severe primary graft dysfunction. Despite treatment with broad spectrum antimicrobial coverage with piperacillin/tazobactam, ciprofloxacin, linezolid, micafungin, voriconazole, and ganciclovir, she failed to improve and developed complex bilateral pleural effusions.Published by Elsevier Inc.

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