Reversible Pulmonary Hypertension Associated with Whipple’s Disease

  • Villa A
  • Nucera G
  • Kostihova A
  • et al.
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Abstract

We describe a case of Whipple’s disease with pulmonary hypertension in a 72-year-old woman in whom the pulmonary hypertension resolved completely after antibiotic therapy. She was admitted to study with a 2-months history of weight loss, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, asthenia, inappetence, and fever. She did not have dyspnoea or respiratory symptoms. A casual echocardiogram showed a pulmonary artery systolic pressure of 95 mmHg. Forty days after starting antibiotic therapy, an echocardiogram showed a complete normalisation of right ventricular involvement. Whipple’s disease is a rare and multisystemic disorder in which pulmonary involvement is not a well-known finding. Although Whipple’s disease is not generally considered as a possible cause of pulmonary hypertension, such awareness is important because it may be potentially resolved with antibiotic therapy.

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Villa, A., Nucera, G., Kostihova, A., Mazzola, A., & Marino, P. (2012). Reversible Pulmonary Hypertension Associated with Whipple’s Disease. Case Reports in Pulmonology, 2012, 1–2. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/382460

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