Article Text
Abstract
A woman travelling to Australia in her early 70s presents to a regional emergency department with chest pain and associated shortness of breath. Her medical history was that of seasonal affective disorder treated with citalopram, and an allergy to ibuprofen. Subsequent CT imaging revealed aortic wall thickening and associated periaortic fluid, and a moderate pleural effusion. This was successfully treated with oral prednisolone, responding within 1 day. Further blood tests revealed a high CD4/CD8 T-cell ratio, which can be seen in autoimmune disease, sarcoidosis and haematological malignancies. Without evidence for other autoimmune processes, the patient was given a provisional diagnosis of descending thoracic aortitis secondary to sarcoidosis, prescribed a weaning regimen of prednisolone, and asked to seek further investigation and management in her home country. This is a case with several learning points; rare disease can cause common presentations/reports, and sometimes empirical therapy is the only therapy.
- vasculitis
- cardiovascular medicine
- travel medicine
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Footnotes
Contributors MAH—the junior medical officer working in Bunbury Hospital on the team that treated the patient who is the subject of the case report—produced and compiled the written article, and acquired images, information and consent. AE—the professor of medicine and senior consultant in general medicine at Bunbury Hospital and the consultant managing the patient who is the subject of the case report during their admission(s) to hospital—provided guidance, direction and critical appraisal of the article, giving suggestions and some citations for the article, thus ultimately deciding that the article is ready for submission.
Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent for publication Obtained.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.