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Document Details :

Title: Why a chest physician should be interested in abdominal pain
Author(s): BOSTOEN S, VAN RAEMDONCK D, DOOMS C
Journal: Acta Clinica Belgica
Volume: 66    Issue: 5   Date: 2011   
Pages: 376-378
DOI: 10.2143/ACB.66.5.1002961

Abstract :






A 37-year-old woman presented at casualty with a 1-day history of progressive spontaneous left iliac fossa pain. She was having her menstruations for 4 days. She had no respiratory symptoms. Her medical history consisted of laparoscopic surgery for endometriosis and ovarian cysts. A very small right basal pneumothorax with visualisation of a hypervascular nodular lesion on the right diaphragm was incidentally noticed on the right diaphragm. We suspected here a catamenial pneumothorax. During video-assisted thoracoscopy the surgeon observed in the centrum tendineum of the diaphragm a small and a large perforation with partial intrathoracic herniation of the liver, but without visible diaphragmatic or pleural endometriosis. The surgeons converted to a small anterior thoracotomy in order to reinforce the large perforation with interrupted non-absorbable sutures and plication of the smaller perforation, and finally performed a mechanical pleural abrasion with a surgical pad.