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A 72-year-old woman presented because of cough with fresh blood for 3 days. She had a history of aortic dissection and underwent aortic arch reconstruction 12 years earlier. On arrival, her vital signs included blood pressure of 150/78 mm Hg and respiratory rate of 24 breathes/min. Physical examination revealed rales over the left hemithorax. Laboratory results included haemoglobin of 10.9 g/dl and platelet count of 113 000/μl. An oblique coronal reformatted image was performed by multislice computed tomography (MSCT) and demonstrated non-tapering distal branches of the left pulmonary artery with an adjacent area of ground-glass attenuation, indicating the culprit lesions (asterisk). The patient was treated conservatively and recovered uneventfully.
Most cases of haemoptysis (90%) originate from the bronchial circulation. MSCT angiography with a combination of multiplanar reformatted images can help identify the origins and courses of arteries that may be responsible for bleeding. Effective trans-arterial embolisation requires such knowledge, particularly for differentiating pulmonary, bronchial or non-bronchial systemic feeder vessels.1
Acknowledgments
This article has been adapted from Tsai S-H, Chu S-J, Chang W-C, Hsu H-H. Haemoptysis from the pulmonary artery Emergency Medicine Journal 2007;24:593