Abstract: Ninety-five lung biopsy procedures in 78 immunocompromised patients yielded treatable diagnoses in 35 per cent of the needle aspirates, 46 per cent of the cutting needle biopsies and 65 per cent of the open thoracotomies. Complication rates of bleeding or pneumothorax were comparable to those previously described in nonimmunocompromised patients. In patients with coagulation defects, the risk of having bleeding complications was high. Among 44 patients with primary lymphoma, 22 (50 per cent) had a lymphomatous infiltrate in the lung. Twenty-two patients with severe hypoxemia were studied and their mortality, although significantly greater than in the patients without hypoxemia, was marginally improved when a treatable lung lesion was found. The over-all recovery rate was 70 per cent when a treatable diagnosis was made in contrast to 25 per cent when there was no specific diagnosis. Hence lung biopsy, particularly by thoracotomy, appears to be a valuable procedure in immunocompromised patients who have otherwise undiagnosable lung lesions.
Publication Year: 1975
Publication Date: 1975-10-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
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Cited By Count: 173
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