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Inmaculada Alfageme

ialfageme@separ.es

Journal articles

2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
R Vazquez, J Solanellas, I Alfageme, L F Valenzuela-García, R Pavon, J Leal, A J Fernandez, F J Sanchez-Burguillos (2008)  Mitral valve prolapse and sudden deafness.   Int J Cardiol 124: 3. 370-371 Mar  
Abstract: To examine the association between MVP and Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing loss (ISSNHL). 349 subjects, 86 with ISSNHL and 263 controls underwent a 2D-echocardiography. Patients with ISSNHL had higher rates of MVP (29.1% vs 2.7%, p<0.001), mitral leaflet thickening (15.1% vs 2.3%, p<0.001), mitral regurgitation (16.3% vs 6.5%, p=0.02) and left atrial enlargement (11.6% vs 3.8%, p=0.01). Our results support the hypothesis that MVP could be one of the etiological factors of ISSNHL.
Notes:
2007
2006
 
DOI   
PMID 
I Alfageme, R Vazquez, N Reyes, J Muñoz, A Fernández, M Hernandez, M Merino, J Perez, J Lima (2006)  Clinical efficacy of anti-pneumococcal vaccination in patients with COPD.   Thorax 61: 3. 189-195 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: A study was undertaken to evaluate the clinical efficacy of the 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (PPV) in immunocompetent patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). METHODS: A randomised controlled trial was carried out in 596 patients with COPD of mean (SD) age 65.8 (9.7) years, 298 of whom received PPV. The main outcome was radiographically proven community acquired pneumonia (CAP) of pneumococcal or unknown aetiology after a mean period of 979 days (range 20-1454). RESULTS: There were 58 first episodes of CAP caused by pneumococcus or of unknown aetiology, 25 in the intervention group and 33 in the non-intervention group. Kaplan-Meier survival curves for CAP did not show significant differences between the intervention and non-intervention arms (log rank test = 1.15, p = 0.28) in the whole group of patients. The efficacy of PPV in all patients was 24% (95% CI -24 to 54; p = 0.333). In the subgroup aged <65 years the efficacy of PPV was 76% (95% CI 20 to 93; p = 0.013), while in those with severe functional obstruction (forced expiratory volume in 1 second <40%) it was 48% (95% CI -7 to 80; p = 0.076). In younger patients with severe airflow obstruction the efficacy was 91% (95% CI 35 to 99; p = 0.002). There were only five cases of non-bacteraemic pneumococcal CAP, all in the non-intervention group (log rank test = 5.03; p = 0.025). Multivariate analysis gave a hazard ratio for unknown and pneumococcal CAP in the vaccinated group, adjusted for age, of 0.20 (95% CI 0.06 to 0.68; p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: PPV is effective in preventing CAP in patients with COPD aged less than 65 years and in those with severe airflow obstruction. No differences were found among the other groups of patients with COPD.
Notes:
2005
 
PMID 
M Merino-Sánchez, I Alfageme-Michavila, N Reyes-Núñez, J Lima-Alvarez (2005)  Prognosis in patients with pneumonia and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease   Arch Bronconeumol 41: 11. 607-611 Nov  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To study the incidence, severity, and mortality rates of pneumonia in a cohort of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients monitored over 3 years. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A total of 596 patients diagnosed with COPD according to spirometric criteria were included in the study. The variables assessed were mortality and severity according to the Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI) for community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). RESULTS: Of the 596 patients included in the study, 75 (12.6%) developed at least 1 episode of pneumonia during the 3 years of the study. The overall incidence of pneumonia was 55.1 per 1000 person-years. There were 88 episodes in 75 patients. COPD severity, evaluated based on percentage of predicted FEV1, was mild in 9 patients, moderate in 24, and severe in 42. Seventy-six (86.3%) episodes were CAP and 12 (13.6%) were acquired in hospital. Fourteen CAP cases corresponded to PSI group V, 28 to group IV, 20 to group III, and 14 to groups I and II. Overall mortality was 12.5% (11/88). The mortality rate was 41.7% (5/12) for nosocomial cases and 7.8% (6/76) for CAP cases (OR, 6.67; 95% confidence interval, 1.65-26.93). Assessing CAP mortality by level of severity, we found that the mortality rate was 35.7% (5/14) for group V and 3.5% (1/28) for group IV. No deaths occurred among patients in the other severity groups. CONCLUSIONS: The incidence of pneumonia in COPD patients is high. More than half the cases of CAP (55.2%) in our COPD patients were classified in PSI risk groups IV and V.
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2004
 
PMID 
I Alfageme Michavila, M Merino Sánchez, J Pérez Ronchel, I Lara Lara, E Suárez García, J López Garrido (2004)  Sarcoidosis following combined ribavirin and interferon therapy: a case report and review of the literature   Arch Bronconeumol 40: 1. 45-49 Jan  
Abstract: Treatment of active chronic viral hepatitis type C with interferon alpha has proved effective and therefore its use is being extended to a large number of patients. Common side effects include respiratory manifestations. One side effect attributable to the immunomodulatory effect of interferon is the possible triggering or exacerbation of systemic or cutaneous sarcoidosis. We report a new case and offer an exhaustive review of the literature. A 49-year-old man with type C chronic, active hepatitis developed new respiratory symptoms and pulmonary infiltrates with hilar and mediastinal adenopathy after 4 months of treatment with pegylated interferon and ribavirin. The transbronchial biopsy showed multiple sarcoid granulomas. When the patient was diagnosed, he had already taken the total dose of interferon and no specific treatment was started. His hepatitis did not respond to therapy and his viral load and transaminase levels remained high.
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2002
2001
 
PMID 
J L Rojas, I Alfageme, I De la Cruz, N Reyes, J Muñoz (2001)  Radicular involvement and medullary invasion from a malignant mesothelioma.   Respiration 68: 1. 106-108  
Abstract: We present the case of a 57-year-old patient who had worked at a fiber-cement factory for 28 years. The patient developed an epithelioid-type pleural mesothelioma 5 years after retiring, after he was diagnosed with asbestosis. Only 5 months after the diagnosis of mesothelioma, a medullar section appeared to be totally invaded by a tumor in the medullar canal, thus causing paraplegia and affecting the bladder and anal sphincters. The patient underwent radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and achieved partial recovery, but died 9 months after the diagnosis.
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1999
 
PMID 
I De la la Morón, I Alfageme Michavila, F Muñoz Lucena, P Ramos, J L Rojas, C García Polo (1999)  Pneumonia due to varicella zoster virus in adults: a review of 13 cases   Arch Bronconeumol 35: 7. 357-359 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: Pneumonia due to varicella-zoster virus is a complication of chickenpox that appears almost solely in adults. The clinical picture ranges from varieties with few symptoms to those with severe respiratory insufficiency. This retrospective study of adult varicella pneumonia cases treated at our hospital over a seven-year period enrolled 13 patients (9 men and 4 women) whose diagnosis of varicella pneumonia was based on clinical and radiologic criteria during the course of disease. Three patients were immunodepressed (two with HIV infection and one with systemic lupus) and one patient was in her third month of pregnancy. Seventy-seven percent of the patients were active smokers. The most common symptoms apart from skin rash and fever were coughing and dyspnea. All had extensive bilateral nodular patterns visible on the chest film, with no pleural involvement or mediastinal adenopathy. All received intravenous acyclovir and outcome was good in all but one HIV-infected patient, who died. The pregnant patient required intensive care.
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PMID 
J Muñoz Méndez, I Alfageme Michavila, M Hernández Hazañas, C García Polo, I De la la Morón (1999)  Setting up written informed consent for fiberoptic bronchoscopy in the pneumology units of Spanish hospitals   Arch Bronconeumol 35: 8. 367-371 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To assess the implantation and quality of written IC in the pulmonology units of Spanish hospitals. METHOD: A descriptive study was initiated with a nation-wide mail and/or telephone survey of 117 Spanish hospitals to determine whether or not written ICs were signed before fiberoptic bronchoscopy. If the respondents answered affirmatively, a copy of the form was requested for evaluation. Evaluation criteria were a) whether IC was specific for fiberoptic bronchoscopy, and if it was, b) whether it contained information as well as a declaration of consent, and c) whether the information and declaration were adequate, fulfilling minimum requirements. RESULTS: Seventy-three pulmonology units (60%) responded and 49 of them (67.1%) reported that they obtained written ICs while 24 (32.9%) did not. Of the 49 departments that reported asking for written IC, 41 (83%) used forms that were specific for fiberoptic bronchoscopy and 8 (17%) used nonspecific forms. The 41 units with specific IC forms submitted papers containing both information and declaration sections. The information was adequate in 10 cases (24%) and the declaration was appropriate in 17 (41%); only 6 (14%) had both adequate information and an appropriate declaration. CONCLUSIONS: Written ICs are increasingly common and are present in 67% of the pulmonology units that responded to the questionnaire. The low number of forms meeting minimum requirements is remarkable. It would be useful to design an IC form that respects our specific sociocultural context for use nation-wide in Spain.
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1998
 
PMID 
J Hernández Borge, I Alfageme Michavila, J Muñoz Méndez, R Villagómez Cerrato, F Campos Rodríguez, N Peña Griñán (1998)  Factors related to diagnostic yield and complications of transbronchial biopsy   Arch Bronconeumol 34: 3. 133-141 Mar  
Abstract: To study the diagnostic yield of transbronchial biopsy (TBB) in lung diseases of different ethiology, as well as to examine several factors implicated in diagnostic yield and complications of TBB. Retrospective study of a series of 172 patients (98 women and 74 men) undergoing TBB. Clinical variables, x-ray and CT patterns and technical factors related to TBB were analyzed in relation to diagnostic yield and definitive diagnosis. We recorded the main complications and studied the possible mechanisms implicated in their appearance. The results of TBB were classified as follows: 1) diagnostic TBB (42.8%); 2) nonspecific TBB (21.1%); absence of parenchyma (NP) (9.7%); 4) normal parenchyma (23.4%); 5) incorrect diagnosis (2.9%). Overall yield was 43.6% but rose to 52% when NP and no infiltrative pneumopathies were excluded. The main findings were infections (23.4%), neoplasms (19.4%), sarcoidosis (14.2%), idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) (17.7%); and other (23.4%). Significant differences in diagnosis were found for age, sex, time of evolution prior to TBB, and x-ray and CT patterns. Complications and pneumothorax appeared more frequently in IPF, neoplasms and infections, although the differences were non significant. Diagnostic value depended mainly on type of disease and ranged from 60% for sarcoidosis to 24% for IPF (p < 0.05), with no differences related to age, sex, presence of immunosuppression, number of TBB or tolerance to exploration. Yield was higher, however, for patients with no loss of radiographic pulmonary volume (56.3% versus 37.5%) and with absence of a CT reticular pattern (44.7% versus 27.3%). Type of opacites also influenced yield (53.4% for ground glass versus 26.7% for reticular patterns), as did distribution of lesions (8.4% for peripheral patterns versus 48.3% for diffuse patterns and 50% for peribronchio-vascular patterns). The site of TBB was the only factor showing clearly significant differences in yield (100% in mild lobe versus 29.5% in upper lobes). Tolerance was poorer in older patients (63.5 +/- 10 versus 52.2 +/- 17 years) and with greater function abnormalities (%FEV1: 48.2 +/- 16.8 versus 70.2 +/- 17.1). Poor tolerance of exploration was associated with the appearance of complications (16.6% vs 6.3) and pneumothorax (25% versus 6.8%). The diagnostic yield of TBB was mainly influenced by the type of disease studied. The various imaging techniques were fundamental for establishing preliminary diagnoses and degree of evolution of a specific cases. In our series, tolerance of the technique was a reliable predictor of complications and the presence of post-biops pneumothorax.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Hernández Borge, I Alfageme Michavila, J Muñoz Méndez, F Campos Rodríguez, N Peña Griñán, R Villagómez Cerrato (1998)  Thoracic empyema in HIV-infected patients: microbiology, management, and outcome.   Chest 113: 3. 732-738 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To evaluate etiology, bacteriology, stage of disease, treatment, and outcome of HIV-infected patients with thoracic empyema (TE) over a 9-year period at a hospital teaching center. DESIGN: We have retrospectively reviewed the charts of all HIV-infected patients with a hospital discharge diagnosis of empyema between January 1985 and November 1993. PATIENTS: Twenty-three patients were identified (22 male and 1 female). The average patient age was 28.7+/-5.3 years. All the patients were injection-drug users, and 10 (43%) fulfilled criteria for an AIDS diagnosis. In 15 cases (65%), the empyema was the first cause of medical consultation, which then led to an HIV infection diagnosis in 11 of them (48%). MEASUREMENTS: In each case, symptoms, chest studies, culture results, procedure timing, length of hospitalization, and outcome were reviewed. RESULTS: Twenty-one patients (91%) had developed an empyema secondary to community-acquired pneumonia. The cultures of pleural fluid were positive in 19 cases (83%). Anaerobes were isolated from 6 patients and aerobes from 13. A single bacteria was isolated from 10 (52%), and multiple organisms (average 2.66 per case) grew in the remaining 9 positive cultures. The most common organism culture growths were Staphylococcus aureus (23%) and Gram-negative bacilli (36%). Length of hospitalization averaged 25.6 days (+/-15). Intercostal tube drainage was necessary in 18 patients and none required surgery. Patients with AIDS diagnosis needed a longer period of hospitalization, and the presence of bacteremia and bronchopleural fistula was more frequent. However, this did not influence a patient's final outcome. A follow-up was available in 18 cases, with 4 deaths recorded (average survival, 35 months; range, 4 to 84 months). CONCLUSIONS: In our series, TE associated with HIV infection was often the primary cause leading to hospital admission and later HIV diagnosis. IV drug abuse was the predominant factor for HIV infection and was also related to clinical presentation and microbiological findings. The best approach to treatment is--as with other patient groups--a prompt drainage and appropriate antibiotic treatment, since a favorable outcome is expected.
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1997
 
PMID 
J Hernández Borge, N Peña Griñán, M Huertas Cifredo, I Alfageme Michavila, A Vargas Puerto, F Campos Rodríguez (1997)  Cytohistological agreement of fine-needle transthoracic lung puncture-aspiration (FNTLPA) in malignant lesions   Arch Bronconeumol 33: 5. 225-229 May  
Abstract: To assess agreement between cyto-histological results and fine needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy of malignant pulmonary lesions, and to study the relation with type of lesion. specimen and impact on patient management. Retrospective study of FNA performed over the past 4 years if a biopsy was available (obtained by fiberoptic bronchoscopy, thoracotomy or biopsy of extrapulmonary organs) for comparison. We recorded overall agreement (OA) and agreement by type of disease or neoplasm (DA). Also studied were the features of the lesion, the puncture technique and material obtained in function of agreement. Eighty samples were available for comparison. OA was 58.7% (K = 0.17). DA was good for epidermoid carcinoma (87%, K = 0.64) and poor for adenocarcinoma (87.5%, K = 0.30). The lowest agreement was for undifferentiated large cell carcinoma (10.3%, K = 0.07). In such cases FNA specimens were not useful for classifying 61.5% of adenocarcinomas and 21.6% of epidermoid carcinomas. Cyto-histological inaccuracy was clinically significant, however, in only 3 (3.7%) patients. Lesions for which diagnosis was consistent were larger in size (4.6 +/- 2.2 versus 4 +/- 1.6 cm, p = NS), were nearer to the visceral pleura (1.5 +/- 2.3 versus 2 +/- 2.2 cm, p = NS) and tended to have been sampled with the guidance of computerized tomography (65% versus 35%), although this did not affect the features or amount of material obtained. We found poor OA for adenocarcinoma and undifferentiated large cell carcinoma. Although disagreement was clinically significant in only 3.7% of cases, the implications indicate that the specificity of the technique should be improved, above all in small cell carcinomas. We observed no differences as to type of lesion or specimen obtained that might predict interpretive difficulties.
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PMID 
F Campos Rodríguez, I Alfageme Michavila, J Hernández Borge, R Villagómez Cerrato, A Vargas Puerto (1997)  Pseudochylothorax. Review of 5 cases   Arch Bronconeumol 33: 8. 422-425 Sep  
Abstract: We undertook a retrospective review of five patients with pseudo-chylothorax diagnosed at our hospital between 1984 and 1994. Pseudo-chylothorax was diagnosed if crystals of cholesterol were observed (CC) or if cholesterol concentrations were over 150 mg/dl, but chylomicrons were absent from pleural effusions with cloudy supernatants after centrifugation. The five patients were males and their mean age was 53 years. All had history of pulmonary or pleural tuberculosis (mean 31 years since diagnosis). All had received chemotherapy and four had undergone therapeutic pneumothorax. Two patients were diagnosed in the course of examination for other reasons, Three were diagnosed while being examined for the cause of pleural effusion. The diagnosis of four patients was based on the presence of CC. Three patients received specific treatment and Mycobacterium tuberculosis was isolated in the pleural fluid of two. One patient required a pleural drain and antibiotics because of empyema related to pseudo-chylothorax. Decortication was needed by two. 1) Pseudo-chylothorax is at present rare. 2) All the cases we saw were associated with earlier tuberculosis infection with residual pleural lesions. 3) Diagnosis usually occurs in the course of examination for the other motives, but the possibility of infected pleural effusion or reactivation of tuberculosis should be considered.
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PMID 
G Antiñolo, S Borrego, M Gili, J Dapena, I Alfageme, F Reina (1997)  Genotype-phenotype relationship in 12 patients carrying cystic fibrosis mutation R334W.   J Med Genet 34: 2. 89-91 Feb  
Abstract: We present a phenotype-genotype correlation analysis in 12 patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) carrying the mutation R334W in the CFTR gene. The clinical data obtained for this group were compared with the clinical data of deltaF508/deltaF508 patients. Current age and age at diagnosis were significantly higher in the R334W mutation group (p=0.028 and p=0.0001). We found a lower rate of Pseudomonas aeruginosa colonisation in patients carrying the R334W mutation, although the difference was not found to be statistically significant. However, we found a statistically significant higher age of onset of Pseudomonas aeruginosa colonisation (p=0.0036) in the group of patients with the R334W mutation. Thirty three percent of R334W patients were pancreatic insufficient, significantly lower than the deltaF508/deltaF508 patients (p=0.004). We also found that the weight expressed as a percentage of ideal weight for height was significantly higher in patients with the R334W mutation (p=0.0028).
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1996
1994
 
PMID 
I Alfageme Michavila, D Martínez Parra, R Escalante Aguilar, C Hierro Guilmain, J Hernández Boje (1994)  Follicular bronchiolitis: an infrequent cause of interstitial pneumopathy   Arch Bronconeumol 30: 8. 407-409 Oct  
Abstract: A 63-year-old woman with follicular bronchiolitis presenting as diffuse interstitial pneumopathy is described. Diagnosis was made by open lung biopsy and the patient was treated in our department until death. The course of disease and response to treatment was similar to that observed in cases of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. No associated collagen disease was found. This report reviews the histological and clinical signs of this disease, as well as treatment.
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PMID 
I Alfageme, L Moreno, C Huertas, A Vargas, J Hernandez, A Beiztegui (1994)  Spontaneous pneumothorax. Long-term results with tetracycline pleurodesis.   Chest 106: 2. 347-350 Aug  
Abstract: The aim of this prospective study was to determine the rate of recurrence for spontaneous pneumothorax (SP) after tetracycline pleurodesis (TCP), using that of observation, tube thoracostomy alone, and thoracotomy as references. From 1985 to the end of 1991, 78 patients were treated with tetracycline pleurodesis and 135 patients served as control subjects. Pleurodesis was induced by instillation of tetracycline and ascorbic acid through the pleural drain. The indication was any SP treated with tube thoracostomy, without active pulmonary infection. Follow-up period was from 13 to 95 months (mean, 45 months); follow-up rate was 94 percent. Post-therapy surgery was necessary for eight patients in whom pleurodesis failed due to presence of a persistent air leak. The ipsilateral recurrence rate of patients treated with TCP was 9 percent (6/66) and recurrence time ranged from 2 days to 9 months. The recurrence rate for patients treated with observation was 36 percent, 35 percent for those having chest tube alone, and none for those undergoing surgery. No death occurred as a direct result of this procedure and all patients could be released from the hospital. Eleven subjects died during the follow-up period; the mean follow-up until death was 37 months (range, 2 to 87 months). Five deaths were due to respiratory causes and six were due to extrapulmonary causes. Tetracycline pleurodesis has been shown to be a good alternative for the prevention of recurrence of SP. Its recurrence rate is lower than that of tube drainage but higher than that of surgical treatment.
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1993
 
PMID 
A Vargas Puerto, I Alfageme Michavila, L Moreno Arrastio, A Beiztegui Sillero, M J Barahona Martín, P Campoy Martínez (1993)  The association of pleural empyema and perinephritic infection: apropos 4 cases   Rev Clin Esp 192: 8. 383-385 May  
Abstract: Empyema of renal origin is very rare (3% in our series). We discuss 4 cases of empyemas associated to perirenal infection. Two of them were diabetic and all of them have renal lithiasis. They made their debut through pleural effusions, isolating Escherichia coli in all of them. Treatment was antibiotics and drainage in both foci, three of them evolved to healing and one of them died being the abdominal foci without drainage. This association must be suspected when no clear etiology of the empyema is present in patients with history of renal lithiasis and diabetes.
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PMID 
I Alfageme, F Muñoz, N Peña, S Umbría (1993)  Empyema of the thorax in adults. Etiology, microbiologic findings, and management.   Chest 103: 3. 839-843 Mar  
Abstract: The etiology, microbiologic findings, and management of 82 episodes of empyema treated by our unit over a period of 6 years were analyzed. Average patient age was 54 years. Eighty-two percent had underlying disease such as alcoholism (29 percent), malignancy (23 percent), and diabetes mellitus (20 percent). Sixty (73 percent) had an empyema develop secondary to a bronchopulmonary infection. Other etiologies were as follows: infradiaphragmatic sepsis, five cases; iatrogenic, ten cases; and idiopathic, seven cases. Cultures were positive in 76 cases and negative in the remaining 6 (2 positive Gram stains, 1 positive under bacilloscopy, and 3 were sterile). Anaerobes were isolated from 25 and aerobes from 47 of the positive cultures. A single bacteria was isolated from 43 and multiple organisms (average: 2.63/case) grew on the remaining 33 positive cultures. Length of hospitalization averaged 37 days. Seven patients received antibiotics only, thoracentesis was performed on three, intercostal chest tube drainage was required in 72, and more aggressive surgery was performed on 12 patients (7 with fibrothorax and 5 with pneumonectomy). Streptokinase was instilled into the pleural space of eight patients with good results. Pleural drainage superinfection occurred at a rate of 8.5 percent. Nine patients died; the remaining recovered. Only three deaths came about as a direct result of the empyema.
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1990
 
PMID 
N Peña Griñan, F Muñoz Lucena, J Vargas Romero, I Alfageme Michavila, S Umbria Dominguez, C Florez Alia (1990)  Yield of percutaneous needle lung aspiration in lung abscess.   Chest 97: 1. 69-74 Jan  
Abstract: STUDY OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the accuracy of PLA with a thin needle in the bacteriologic diagnosis of patients with lung abscess and in demonstrating possible coexistence of an underlying lung carcinoma, and the influence of this technique in the treatment and outcome of these patients. DESIGN: Case series. SETTING: Tertiary university referral center. PATIENTS: Consecutive sample of 50 patients with clinical picture suggestive of pulmonary infection and single or multiple cavitation of at least 1 cm in diameter on chest x-ray films, and lack of clinical suspicion of active pulmonary tuberculosis. One patient was excluded from the study after demonstration of tuberculosis by PLA. INTERVENTIONS: Lung aspirates were obtained under fluoroscopic guidance by introduction of a 22-gauge disposable spinal needle within the abscess cavity and were immediately transported to the bacteriology laboratory and pathology department for processing. All patients were initially treated with clindamycin. Tobramycin was added in all those patients with hospital-acquired infection, lack of foulness of sputum, and those who were initially severely ill. Definite treatment was based on the results of bacteriologic cultures. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Cultures of LAs were positive in 82 percent (40/49) of patients. In 20 cases the isolates were monobacterial (13 aerobic bacteria and seven anaerobic). In the remaining 20 cases, cultures grew more than one kind of bacteria (four exclusively aerobic, five exclusively anaerobic, and 11 mixed), with an average of 3.25 types of bacteria per case. Anaerobes were found as a single bacteria or associated with other aerobic bacteria in only 58 percent (23/40). The results of LA cultures led to change in the initial antibiotic trial in 23 patients (47 percent). Of ten cases in which bronchogenic carcinoma was demonstrated, cytologic study of LA was done in nine, and eight had positive cytologic yield. Pneumothorax occurred in seven cases (14 percent) as the sole complication. CONCLUSIONS: (1) Percutaneous lung aspiration had a high diagnostic yield and accuracy in our series, with a relatively low incidence of complications. (2) Anaerobic bacteria were less frequently implicated in our cases than previously reported. This finding led to significant changes in the initial empiric antibiotic treatment.
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1983
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