Chest pain after kidney transplantation owing to pneumomediastinum: a case report
- PMID: 24034055
- DOI: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2013.02.143
Chest pain after kidney transplantation owing to pneumomediastinum: a case report
Abstract
Background: Chest pain in kidney transplant recipients can signify a life-threatening condition.
Case report: A patient with polycystic kidney disease who underwent living donor kidney transplantation with open bilateral native nephrectomy developed acute substernal chest pain 10 days post-transplantation. History, physical, and diagnostic studies identified no cardiac or pulmonary causes for the pain, but radiography showed mediastinal air. No vascular or thoracic injury explained the development of the pneumomediastinum. After 1 day on oxygen, the chest pain symptoms resolved. Repeat x-rays showed resolution of the pneumomediastinum.
Discussion: Pneumomediastinum resulting from air migrating from the abdominal cavity to the thorax has not been described after open removal of diseased abdominal organs. This case illustrates that creation of a potential space in the abdominal cavity can be associated with the development of pneumomediastinum.
Conclusions: Conservative measures were sufficient to resolve the pneumomediastinum and symptoms in this patient.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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