ISSN: 1885-5857 Impact factor 2023 7.2
Vol. 55. Num. 2.
Pages 185 (February 2002)

Pneumopericardium complicating bronchogenic carcinoma

Neumopericardio como complicación de carcinoma broncogénico

Carlos González-JuanateyaJuan Vidán MartínezaJosé R González-Juanateyb

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We report the case of a 56-year-old man hospitalized in our hospital with a 48-h clinical picture of pain in the neck and right shoulder. The patient had been diagnosed a month before admission as poorly differentiated epidermoid lung carcinoma, stage IV, and was awaiting palliative chemotherapy. During the study of his pulmonary carcinoma, hepatic and pelvic osseous metastases were detected. The findings of physical examination included cardiac auscultation of a characteristic «bubbling water» systodiastolic murmur and hepatomegaly of 2 cm. The ECG revealed diffuse negative T waves. In the posteroanterior chest radiograph (Figure 1), a large pneumopericardium and parahilar mass in the upper lobe of the left lung were visible. A thoracic CAT confirmed the presence of severe pneumopericardium produced by a bronchopericardial fistula (arrow) (Figure 2) secondary to the bronchogenic carcinoma. A transthoracic echocardiogram disclosed minimal pericardial effusion without echocardiographic signs of tamponade. Palliative cytostatic treatment with a combination of 6180 mg gemcitabine and 52 mg vinorelbine in a single dose was given intravenously without complications. The patient did not present clinical manifestations of cardiac tamponade, so conservative treatment was decided on. The pneumopericardium was reabsorbed partially without incident within a few days, and the clinical picture of pain in the neck and right shoulder improved with analgesic treatment. Nevertheless, 4 weeks after hospital discharge the patient died of massive hemoptysis.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 2. 

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