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find Keyword "Pulmonary neoplasm" 2 results
  • MDCT findings and clinicopathological analysis of pulmonary mucosa associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma

    ObjectiveTo study the clinical and pathological characteristics and imaging manifestations of pulmonary mucosa associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma.MethodsThe clinical and multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) imaging data of 17 patients with pathological proven pulmonary MALT lymphoma were reviewed retrospectively.ResultsThe MDCT manifestations were divided into 4 types: ① pneumonia/consolidation, ② mass/nodule type, ③ bronchovascular lymphatic type, ④ mixed type. The imaging features included air bronchiectasis in 13 cases and bronchiectasis in 9 cases. Multiple small pulmonary nodules were found in 11 cases, ground glass opacity in 9 cases, 4 cases of pleural effusion, pulmonary hilar and mediastinal lymph node enlargement in 3 cases. Among these 17 cases, 4 had extra-pulmonary involvement and 2 without obvious symptoms. The main clinical symptoms including cough, expectoration, dyspnea, fever, chest pain, hemoptysis, night sweats. The pathological manifestation is the infiltration of a large number of B lymphocytes and nuclear heterocells.ConclusionsThe clinical manifestations of pulmonary MALT lymphoma are not specific, but the progress is slow, and may be associated with autoimmune diseases. The main MDCT findings of pulmonary MALT lymphoma include consolidation, nodules or masses with air bronchogram. Lymph node enlargement is rare. Clinical diagnosis should also be based on pathological results.

    Release date:2018-09-21 02:39 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Relationship between drainage volume on the first postoperative day and complications after video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery lobectomy

    ObjectiveTo investigate the correlation between the postoperative day 1 (POD1) drainage volume and postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs). MethodsThe clinical data of 254 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients undergoing thoracoscopic lobectomy at our department from January 2014 to June 2018 were retrospectively reviewed. According to whether there were PPCs after operation, patients were divided into a PPCs group (51 patients, 33 males and 18 females, aged 65.2±7.3 years) and a non-PPCs group (203 patients, 110 males and 93 females, aged 62.4±8.2 years). The correlation between POD1 drainage volume and PPCs was analyzed. ResultsThe POD1 drainage volume in the PPCs group was significantly more than that in the non-PPCs group (337.5±127.4 ml vs. 208.7±122.9 ml, P=0.000). The result of regression analysis showed that POD1 drainage volume was an independent risk factor for the occurrence of PPCs. Receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC curve) analysis showed that POD1 drainage volume of 265 ml was the cut-off point to predict PPCs. The rate of PPCs in the group of POD1 drainage volume less than 265 ml was significantly lower than that in the group of drainage volume more than 265 ml (8.3% vs. 43.0%, P=0.000). ConclusionThe POD1 drainage volume is closely related to the occurrence of PPCs, which can be used to predict the occurrence of PPCs.

    Release date:2019-05-28 09:28 Export PDF Favorites Scan
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