Rev Pneumol Clin
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Review Case Reports
[Intestinal perforation occurring at the beginning of treatment: a severe complication of bacillary tuberculosis].
We report 2 cases of intestinal perforation caused by tuberculosis and affecting the small intestine in one case and the colon in the other case. The patients were men aged 49 and 51 years respectively. Both were cachectic and presented with advanced open pulmonary tuberculosis. ⋯ They may occur at any time, and particularly just after an antituberculous therapy has been instituted. Clinical presentation is one of acute peritonitis requiring emergency laparotomy. Mortality has been reduced by technical improvements, notably temporary enterostomy, but perforation remains a serious and often fatal complication of tuberculosis in patients with severe malnutrition.
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A case of pulmonary Schistosoma mansoni bilharziasis observed in a female patient from Martinique is reported. In view of the unusual clinical and radiological features of the disease and of its rapidly worrying course, an open chest lung biopsy was performed which provided the diagnosis. A search for eggs in the stools was negative, and serological tests were weakly positive, treatment with Praziquantel resulted in rapid and complete cure.
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This study reports the experience of the medical centre of Villiers Saint-Denis, where about 40 cases of pyothorax with or without broncho-pleural fistula were seen between 1975 and 1981. The authors describe their method to drain and wash the pleural cavity. ⋯ With this method, the infection was eradicated in 90% of the cases, and the broncho-pleural fistula closed within about 4 months in 80% of the cases. This method is compared with other methods used to treat pyothorax.
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Between 1980 and 1985, 66 patients with chronic obstructive lung disease (respiratory deficit of the restrictive type) were admitted to our department after an episode of acute respiratory failure treated with assisted ventilation in an intensive care unit. These patients were in a particularly poor clinical condition, due to their previous long stay in the intensive care unit (mean 43 days), the high percentage of tracheotomies (mean 44%), the loss of autonomy of movement in 30% of the cases and the presence of an associated pathology in 45% of the patients. These data explain the high mortality observed in this group: 40% of the patients died within one year of the acute respiratory failure episode. Other prognostic factors, notably the patients' nutritional status, must also be taken into account.