Copyright ©ERS Journals Ltd 2007 A 35-year-old male with chronic coughDept of Pulmonary and Critical Care Services, General Hospital "Evangelismos", School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece. CORRESPONDENCE: G. T. Stathopoulos, Dept of Pulmonary and Critical Care Services, General Hospital "Evangelismos", School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 3 Ploutarhou Str., 10675 Athens, Greece. Fax: 30 2107235521. E-mail: gstathop{at}med.uoa.gr
Received: July 31, 2006
A 35-yr-old male was examined in the outpatient clinic of the present authors' department. He complained of a dry paroxysmal cough of indeterminate origin that he had noticed 3 months earlier. The cough was associated with a tickling feeling in the throat. There was no association between coughing flares and meals, nasal discharge, season, time of day or body posture. The patient did not recall having symptoms compatible with an upper airway viral infection in the past 3 months and reported no gastro-intestinal symptoms like daily heartburn and regurgitation. He lived in the city, was a lifetime nonsmoker, his previous medical history was unremarkable and he was not taking any medication. He worked as an electronic engineer in a smoke- and dust-free environment and exhibited a type A personality. Upon appearance of the cough 3 months earlier, he had been examined by a physician and had since received inhaled salmeterol (50 µg b.i.d.) and fluticasone (250 µg b.i.d.), without improvement.
A thorough physical examination and routine laboratory tests, including white blood cell count and differential, red blood cell count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, liver and renal function tests, serum C-reactive protein and an ECG were normal. Chest (fig. 1
Since an empiric trial of inhaled corticosteroids had already been administered, treatment was discontinued and empiric treatment for gastro-oesophageal reflux disease was administered with a proton pump inhibitor (omeprazole, 20 mg b.i.d.) over a period of 2 months. Neither withholding inhaled steroids nor omeprazole administration had any effect on the patient's symptoms and coughing persisted. Therefore, a computed tomographic (CT) scan of the chest was ordered (fig. 3
BEFORE TURNING THE PAGE, INTERPRET THE CHEST RADIOGRAPHS, PULMONARY FUNCTION TESTS, COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY AND ULTRASOUND, AND SUGGEST A DIAGNOSIS.
Chest radiography Figure 1
Pulmonary function and bronchoprovocation challenge tests
Computed tomography
Transthoracic ultrasound
Clinical course After consultation with the patient on the possibility that his cough may be caused by the pericardial cyst, a decision was made to proceed to surgical removal of the cyst. Pre-operative bronchoscopy, performed to rule out coexisting endobronchial lesions, was unremarkable. The cyst was thereafter removed via video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. Pathological examination of the cyst concurred with the diagnosis of pericardial cyst. The patient's cough resolved immediately after surgery and has not reappeared after 6 months of follow-up.
DISCUSSION Pericardial cysts are the second most common type of primary mediastinal cysts after bronchial cysts and constitute 7% of all mediastinal lesions 3. They are most frequently congenital, arising from aberrant fusion of pericardial lacunae in approximately one in 100,000 individuals; however, some may be acquired. They remain unchanged in size or slowly enlarge over a period of many years and are often discovered in routine chest radiographs of asymptomatic adults, usually in the fourth to fifth decade of life. They are usually unilocular cystic lesions with a wall of varying thickness with fat cells, lymphocytes, blood vessels and muscle fibres and clear fluid contents, hence the name "clear water" or "spring water" cyst 4. Of all pericardial cysts, 70% are located in the right cardiophrenic angle, 22% in the left cardiophrenic angle and the remaining 8% elsewhere in the pericardium (e.g. the posterior mediastinum, the right or left hilar region, the right paratracheal area or the para-aortic region) 3. The differential diagnosis of pericardial cyst includes foramen of Morgagni diaphragmatic hernia, large right pericardial fat pad, mediastinal or diaphragmatic tumours, and tumours of the heart or pericardium 5. Thymomas are a relatively common cause of mediastinal mass in young patients, and while thymoma usually resides just anterior to the aortic root, it can occur anywhere from the neck to the cardiophrenic angle. Most thymoma patients are asymptomatic, although one third experience chest pain, cough, dyspnoea and/or other symptoms related to compression or invasion of adjacent structures 6. Although the majority of patients with pericardial cysts are asymptomatic, about one third exhibit symptoms. The most common symptoms associated with pericardial cysts are vague chest pain, dyspnoea and persistent cough 79. However, complications can be life-threatening, including cardiac compression, right ventricular outflow obstruction, cyst rupture with cardiac tamponade and cyst infection with cardiac or large vessel erosion. There have been reports of pericardial cysts causing atrial fibrillation by obstructing right atrial filling or even sudden death after a stress test, and of hydatid pericardial cysts presenting with circulatory collapse 5, 1012. There are no reports of malignant transformation. Traditional treatment includes thoracotomy or thoracoscopic removal, but pericardial cysts can also be diagnosed and treated by percutaneous aspiration and injection of ethanol as a sclerosing agent with no evidence of recurrence upon a 3-yr follow-up 9. Recurrence has been reported after thoracoscopic removal with successful thoracoscopic re-excision 13. In the present case, after ruling out common causes of chronic cough according to current guidelines, the diagnostic evaluation suggested that an uncommon extrapulmonary cause, such as a left-sided pericardial cyst, was responsible for the patient's cough, probably via stimulation of the afferent vagal receptors from the airways 14. In this regard, the tickling sensation in the patient's throat associated with the cough, disappeared with the cough after removal of the pericardial cyst. As hydatid disease is endemic in Greece, antibodies against Echinoccocus granulosus were measured in the patient's serum but were not detectable. In conclusion, although it is rare that a pericardial cyst should present with the sole symptom of cough, it should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with chronic cough after excluding other common causes.
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