Digging Deeper into Dyspnea
On physical examination her weight was 159 kg, temperature 36.3°C, pulse 94 beats per minute, respirations 16 breaths per minute, blood pressure 116/90 mm Hg, and oxygen saturation 98% on room air. She had a very large body habitus and no scleral icterus. Her jugular venous pressure could not be seen. Auscultation revealed clear lungs, a normal S1 and S2 with no murmurs, gallops, or rubs. The abdomen was obese soft, and nontender with healing laparoscopy incisions. The lower extremities showed 2+ pitting edema and multiple superficial skin ulcerations on the lower legs at various stages of healing.
Due to the recent appendectomy, a computed tomography (CT) scan of the abdomen was obtained, demonstrating normal postsurgical changes with marked hepatic congestion. An included portion of the lower thorax revealed a markedly thickened pericardium measurinf >6 mm in multiple locations (Figure, panel A). A transthoracic echocardiogram, although limited by suboptimal image quality, showed a subtle interventricular septal bounce, mild respiratory changes in the mitral E velocity, increased mitral medial annulus e′ velocity of 0.15 m/s (Figure, panel B), and dilated inferior vena cava with expiratory flow reversals in the hepatic veins. Subsequent tuberculin skin test and QuantiFERON-TB tests were negative, and sputum samples were negative for acid-fast bacilli.
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— Mackram F. Eleid, MD, Barry A. Borlaug, MD, Sharon Mulvagh, MD
This article originally appeared in the March 2013 issue of The American Journal of Medicine.