Left pneumonectomy for primary lung cancer with Trousseau's syndrome.
BMJ Case Rep 2021;
14:14/3/e240927. [PMID:
33753389 PMCID:
PMC7986757 DOI:
10.1136/bcr-2020-240927]
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Abstract
Trousseau's syndrome is a paraneoplastic syndrome and a pathological condition that causes cerebral stroke symptoms due to hypercoagulation associated with malignant tumours. There have been many cases of advanced lung cancer, but few reports have described surgery for lung cancer with Trousseau's syndrome. We encountered a 76-year-old man suspected of having Trousseau's syndrome associated with lung cancer. He was transferred to our hospital on the second day after the onset. After admission, he was treated with heparin and edaravone, and his condition improved. On the 12th day after the onset, we performed left pneumonectomy and lymph node dissection (ND2a-2). The final pathological results were adenocarcinoma, pathological stage was T4 (tumour size: 77 mm, pulmonary artery invasion) N1(#11, #12u) M0, stage IIIA. He has been recurrence free for 23 months since the surgery. In the future, we need to follow his condition carefully.
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