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A 40-year-old male presented with progressive breathlessness and hoarseness of voice. He denied any history of chest pain, cough, haemoptysis, palpitations or paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea. He was a smoker with 10 pack-year of smoking. His medical illness includes long-standing hypertension of 10 years duration controlled with oral amlodipine and atenolol. Previous echocardiography showed dilated and hypertrophied left ventricle with severe systolic dysfunction. At presentation, he was fully conscious with vitals as follows: heart rate 124/min, respiratory rate 34/min and blood pressure 110/70 mm Hg. All peripheral pulses were well felt. Chest examination revealed diminished movement of left hemithorax, reduced vocal resonance and breath sound with shift of mediastinum to right. Posteroanterior chest radiograph showed an opaque left hemithorax and a large retrocardiac opacity (arrows) with contralateral shift of mediastinum (figure 1A). Ultrasonography of thorax showed a large mixed echogenic lesion with underlying collapse-consolidation of left lung and the absence of free fluid in pleural space. CT angiogram demonstrated a Stanford type B aortic dissection extending from proximal arch to the aortic bifurcation (figures 1C and 2). The dilated aorta caused compression of left main bronchus resulting in complete collapse of left lung (figure 1B). The patient was referred for immediate cardiothoracic intervention.
The usual causes of opaque hemithorax include massive pleural effusion, large pulmonary mass, destroyed lung, consolidation, collapse and agenesis of lung. Unilateral lung collapse occurs due to bronchial obstruction by an endobronchial lesion, mucous plugging, foreign body aspiration and extrinsic compression from a tumour or lymph node. Descending aortic aneurysm presenting as left lung collapse is rarely reported.1 Aortic aneurysm usually manifests as a mediastinal widening on chest radiograph that may be associated with a pleural effusion more commonly on the left side. Compression of adjacent structures by the expanding dissection and aneurysmal dilatation of aorta can lead to respiratory distress, dysphagia, superior vena cava obstruction, Horner’s syndrome and hoarseness of voice (Ortner’s syndrome). Aortic dissection has been classified into Stanford type A involving the ascending aorta and Stanford type B that does not involve the ascending aorta. The diagnosis is usually established by non-invasive techniques like echocardiography, CT scan and MRI.2 ECG-gated CT is considered the gold standard imaging modality in acute scenario. In view of smoking history, hoarseness of voice and unilateral opaque hemithorax a neoplastic pathology was initially considered in our case; however, thoracic ultrasonography and CT scan helped in timely diagnosis of aortic dissection, thereby preventing an inadvertent puncture of aorta.
Learning points
Aortic dissection can rarely present as Ortner’s syndrome and unilateral opaque hemithorax.
Thoracic ultrasonography should be routinely performed in cases of unilateral opaque hemithorax before attempting thoracentesis to avoid catastrophe like aortic puncture.
Footnotes
Contributors SS is responsible for planning, conception of idea, collection of images and writing of initial draft. MKP is equally responsible for the conception, design and writing of the manuscript. SB helped in the writing of the manuscript, radiological description, legends for images and involved in the design of the manuscript. PRM has contributed to the writing and critically reviewed the manuscript to its final shape before submission to the journal. All authors were involved in the active management of the patient and have reviewed the final manuscript before submission to the journal. We hereby declare MKP as the guarantor for the overall content of the manuscript.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Obtained.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.