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Hydropneumothorax as an iatrogenic complication after nasogastric intubation
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  1. Hugo Jorge Casimiro1,2,
  2. Joana Carreira1,
  3. Beatriz Navarro1,
  4. Mário Parreira1
  1. 1Internal Medicine, Centro Hospitalar de Setubal EPE, Setúbal, Portugal
  2. 2Instituto de Histologia e Biologia do Desenvolvimento, Universidade de Lisboa Faculdade de Medicina, Lisboa, Portugal
  1. Correspondence to Dr Hugo Jorge Casimiro, hugojorgecasimiro{at}gmail.com

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Description

A 62-year-old woman with history of frontotemporal dementia was admitted to a Psychiatry ward due to severe insomnia. In the morning, after the admission a nasogastric tube was placed to initiate enteral feeding and medication since she was refusing all oral intake. Later that night, she was found unresponsive, dyspnoeic and with severe hypotension. Physical examination identified clinical signs of respiratory distress and decreased vesicular breath sounds on the right hemithorax. The gasometric evaluation revealed the presence of hypoxaemia and lactic acidosis. A posteroanterior chest radiograph …

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