Fiberoptic Angioscopy: Role in the Diagnosis of Chronic Pulmonary Arterial Obstruction
Abstract
We evaluated the role of fiberoptic angioscopy in eight patients with suspected chronic pulmonary embolic obstruction of the pulmonary arteries. Angioscopy, preceded by ventilation-perfusion lung scans, right-heart catheterization, and pulmonary angiography, resulted in diagnostic changes in four patients: from pulmonary artery agenesis to chronic emboli; from chronic emboli to normal pulmonary arterial intima (primary pulmonary hypertension); from chronic pulmonary emboli to extrinsic compression of a major pulmonary artery (fibrosing mediastinitis); and from suspected agenesis or chronic emboli to a tumor (fibrosarcoma) of the pulmonary artery. Angioscopy also more accurately determined the extent and surgical accessibility of chronic embolic obstruction in the five patients with that disorder; as a result, we decided that the obstruction in one patient was inoperable. No significant complications occurred with angioscopy and we conclude that its direct visualization capability can contribute significantly to the diagnostic evaluation of suspected chronic pulmonary arterial obstruction.
Article and Author Information
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▸From the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine and the Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of California School of Medicine; San Diego, California.
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Grant support: in part by the Grant and Inez Parker Foundation and RJR Industries.
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▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Deborah Shure, M.D.; Veterans Administration Medical Center, V-111-J, 3350 La Jolla Village Drive; San Diego, CA 92161.
- ©1985 American College of Physicians
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