Strangulated right-sided diaphragmatic hernia presenting and treated as lung empyema: beware of the differential diagnosis.
Sapna GuptaDaniel WarrellLaurie SmithGethin Llewellyn WilliamsPublished in: BMJ case reports (2020)
A 78-year-old man with no surgical history or recent trauma presented to the emergency department with sudden onset right-sided chest pain and dyspnoea. He was admitted under the physicians for investigations and was subsequently diagnosed with empyema of the right thorax. After no improvement with intravenous antibiotics, a chest drain was inserted; no pus was drained. He worsened clinically; a repeated CT scan demonstrated an incarcerated loop of small bowel within the right thoracic cavity secondary to a diaphragmatic hernia (DH). The patient had emergency surgery to remove necrotic small bowel and to lavage the thorax. Strangulated DH should be considered as a differential diagnosis where presentation is unusual and empyema does not improve after initial management.
Keyphrases
- small bowel
- emergency department
- case report
- computed tomography
- minimally invasive
- primary care
- dual energy
- spinal cord
- public health
- healthcare
- image quality
- contrast enhanced
- high dose
- magnetic resonance imaging
- transcription factor
- spinal cord injury
- adverse drug
- acute coronary syndrome
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- newly diagnosed
- drug induced