Case Report

Volume: 3 | Issue: 3 | Published: Oct 20, 2022 | Pages: 229 - 232 | DOI: 10.24911/SJEMed/72-1654163671

Spontaneous pneumomediastinum in a male adolescent using e-cigarettes


Authors: Feras Abuzeyad orcid logo , Naser Yusuf Aljawder orcid logo , Emad Al Ghriw orcid logo


Abstract

Background: Spontaneous pneumomediastinum (PM) is a rare benign disease entity in children with several predisposing factors. This study reports a case of spontaneous PM related to the use of electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) in a 17-year-old adolescent. Case Presentation: A 17-year-old male, user of e-cigarettes, with no underlying pulmonary disease presented to the emergency department with acute chest pain, without any preceding events including trauma. His physical examination was unremarkable apart from positive Hamman's crunch. A plain chest X-ray showed PM and left-sided apical pneumothorax. Chest computed tomography confirmed the presence of PM, accompanied by pneumopericardium and bilateral apical pneumothoraces. The patient reported the use of e-cigarettes, and he was admitted and conservatively managed in the hospital and discharged after three uneventful days. In this case, smoking e-cigarettes was the only predisposing factor found to be associated with the development of spontaneous PM. Conclusion: Emergency physicians should consider the diagnosis of spontaneous PM in adolescents who are presenting with acute chest pain, and e-cigarette smoking could be a precipitating factor.

Keywords: Pneumomediastinum, emergency department, electronic cigarettes, pediatric, chest pain



Pubmed Style

Feras Abuzeyad, Naser Yusuf Aljawder, Emad Al Ghriw. Spontaneous pneumomediastinum in a male adolescent using e-cigarettes. SJE Med. 2022; 20 (October 2022): 229-232. doi:10.24911/SJEMed/72-1654163671

Publication History

Received: June 02, 2022

Accepted: September 21, 2022

Published: October 20, 2022


Authors

Feras Abuzeyad

Department of Emergency Medicine, King Hamad University Hospital, Bahrain

orcid logo ORCID

Naser Yusuf Aljawder

Department of Emergency Medicine, King Hamad University Hospital, Bahrain

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Emad Al Ghriw

Radiology Department, King Hamad University Hospital, Bahrain.

orcid logo ORCID