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A 77-year-old man was transferred to this hospital because of worsening bilateral air-space disease and acute renal failure.
He had stopped smoking 30 years before admission. He had mild chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; hypertension, for which he was taking lisinopril; and rheumatoid arthritis, which had begun one and a half years before admission and was being treated with indomethacin and hydroxychloroquine.
Six days before admission, the patient entered another hospital because of an acute onset of dyspnea, without fever. Bilateral rales and rhonchi were audible. A thoracic radiograph showed numerous diffuse pulmonary opacities and a minimal right-sided pleural effusion. Laboratory
Differential Diagnosis
PulmonaryRenal Syndrome with Pulmonary Hemorrhage
Pulmonary Infection
Congestive Heart Failure
Rheumatoid Arthritis and Cardiopulmonary Disease
Type of Rheumatoid Lung Disease in This Case
Conclusions
Clinical Diagnoses
Dr. Helen M. Hollingsworth's Diagnosis
Pathological Discussion
Anatomical Diagnosis
References
This article has been cited by other articles:
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