Cocaine-Induced Ventilation/Perfusion Mismatch Mimicking Pulmonary Embolism

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Abstract

Pulmonary complications from cocaine use can range from bronchospasm to vasospasm leading to pulmonary infarction. Profound vasospasm may also lead to perfusion defects presenting as pulmonary embolism on ventilation-perfusion scan. A 65-year-old patient with a past medical history of substance abuse and chronic kidney disease presents to the emergency department with sudden-onset chest pain and shortness of breath. Ventilation-perfusion scan revealed filling defect most notably in the lingual lobe. He was later discharged on warfarin for the management of pulmonary embolism. The patient presented to the emergency department 2 weeks later with similar complaints; the international normalized ratio was subtherapeutic, and urine drug screen was positive for cocaine. Repeat ventilation-perfusion scan revealed no filling defects. Follow-up bilateral venous Doppler of lower extremities and D-dimer were within normal limits.

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Surapaneni, P. K., Abe, T., & Fas, N. (2020). Cocaine-Induced Ventilation/Perfusion Mismatch Mimicking Pulmonary Embolism. Journal of Investigative Medicine High Impact Case Reports, 8. https://doi.org/10.1177/2324709620906962

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