Cervico-Mediastinal Emphysema Due to Panic Attack: A Case Report
Thomas P Clements, Antonia P Tse, Tom J Rourke

TL;DR
A young woman developed cervical and mediastinal emphysema after a panic attack, showing it can happen without respiratory or digestive issues.
Contribution
This case report highlights panic disorder and hyperventilation as a novel cause of spontaneous cervico-mediastinal emphysema.
Findings
Cervico-mediastinal emphysema occurred in an 18-year-old after a panic attack with no prior risk factors.
Computed tomography confirmed retropharyngeal and mediastinal emphysema without other abnormalities.
The patient recovered fully with observation and intravenous antibiotics.
Abstract
Spontaneous cervical emphysema is an uncommon entity characterised by free air in the deep neck spaces without obvious cause. The differential diagnosis of cervical emphysema is broad, because the visceral space is contiguous with mediastinum and retroperitoneum. We present an unusual case of spontaneous cervico-mediastinal emphysema (CME) that occurred in an 18-year-old female after a panic attack. The presenting features included dyspnoea, chest pain and subcutaneous emphysema. She had no other sign of aerodigestive tract pathology, and history was negative for risk factors such as asthma, vomiting and recreational drug use. Computed tomography of the neck and thorax demonstrated retropharyngeal and visceral space emphysema extending through the mediastinum. No other abnormalities such as lung bullae were apparent, leading to a diagnosis of spontaneous CME. The patient was admitted…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPneumothorax, Barotrauma, Emphysema · Otolaryngology and Infectious Diseases · Trauma Management and Diagnosis
