Investigation of the Prevalence of Chronic Pulmonary Effusion Causes and Response to Treatment (Pleurodesis) in Patients
Alireza Shirzadi, Izadmehr Ahmadinejad, Mojtaba Ahmadinejad, Saeed Hatami, Ali Soltanian, Yasmina Ahmadinejad

TL;DR
This study examines the causes and treatment outcomes of chronic pleural effusion in patients at tertiary healthcare centers.
Contribution
The study provides insights into the prevalence of malignancy as a cause and the effectiveness of pleurodesis techniques.
Findings
Malignancy was the most common cause of chronic pleural effusion, affecting 65.9% of patients.
Chemical pleurodesis had a higher complete response rate (65%) compared to mechanical pleurodesis (55%).
Heart failure and liver cirrhosis were other major causes of chronic pleural effusion.
Abstract
Pleural effusion, the pathological accumulation of fluid in the pleural space, is widespread. This study investigates pleural effusion in terms of malignancy among patients referred to tertiary health care centers and evaluates the response rates to different pleurodesis techniques. This cross-sectional study enrolled all patients with pleural effusion referred to a tertiary health care center. Laboratory data, including White Blood Cell count and differentiation (WBC), Hemoglobin levels (HB), Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR), and biochemical analysis results of the pleural fluid (protein, glucose, and lactate dehydrogenase) were recorded. Data from pleural fluid cytopathological examination, including cell count, cell types, gram staining, and pleural fluid culture, were also documented. Patients undergoing pleurodesis were assessed for response rates, which were categorized as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPleural and Pulmonary Diseases · Occupational and environmental lung diseases · Pneumothorax, Barotrauma, Emphysema
