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SU26.{1,3-4} | Cardiothoracic Surgery — PBL Case

CLINICAL SETTING

You are part of a surgical firm in a tertiary hospital with a cardiothoracic unit. Over a single on-call week, three unrelated patients are referred. The team must reason from presentation to diagnosis to the principle of management for each, applying the cardiothoracic framework: for the mediastinum, the compartment and any associated syndrome predict the pathology; for the lung, histology and stage decide treatment; and for the heart, surgery corrects a definable mechanical problem. Work through the triggers in order — do not jump ahead.

Trigger 1: The breathless young woman with droopy eyelids

A 38-year-old woman is referred with three months of fatigable drooping of both eyelids, double vision worse in the evening, and difficulty chewing towards the end of meals. A chest X-ray taken for a cough shows a widened upper mediastinum; contrast CT confirms a discrete ANTERIOR mediastinal mass. She has no fever, no weight loss and no night sweats.

DISCUSSION POINTS

  • Which compartment does the mass occupy, and how does the compartment narrow the differential?
  • What is the classic differential for an anterior mediastinal mass, and which single diagnosis best fits her neurological syndrome?
  • What is the relationship between this tumour and her muscle weakness, and what bedside/serological clues confirm it?
  • Why might the management here be primarily surgical, and what must be optimised before any operation?
Click to reveal Trigger 2: The smoker with a changed cough and a small pupil (discuss previous trigger first!)

Trigger 2: The smoker with a changed cough and a small pupil

A 66-year-old man, a 40-pack-year smoker, has a three-month history of a changed cough, one episode of haemoptysis and 5 kg weight loss. On examination he has right-sided ptosis, a constricted pupil and a dry forehead on that side, plus aching in the inner aspect of the right arm. Chest X-ray shows a right apical shadow.

DISCUSSION POINTS

  • Name the eye/face syndrome and explain the anatomical basis of an apical tumour producing it.
  • List the four characteristic ways lung cancer presents and identify which this patient illustrates.
  • Outline the investigative sequence that takes the team from 'a shadow' to a treatment decision.
  • Why must histology AND stage both be established before anyone discusses an operation?
Click to reveal Trigger 3: The central mass with low sodium (discuss previous trigger first!)

Trigger 3: The central mass with low sodium

Bronchoscopic biopsy of the same patient's CENTRAL tumour returns small-cell lung carcinoma. His serum sodium is 118 mmol/L with concentrated urine, consistent with SIADH. Staging shows mediastinal nodal involvement.

DISCUSSION POINTS

  • How does the histology (SCLC) change the management compared with non-small-cell cancer?
  • Explain the paraneoplastic basis of his hyponatraemia and why it does not, by itself, make him operable or inoperable.
  • Contrast the role of surgery in SCLC versus resectable NSCLC.
  • Summarise the principle: when does surgery 'help' in lung cancer, and when does it not?

Group Task Assignments

  • Group A: Construct a one-page table of the three mediastinal compartments with their characteristic masses (the anterior 'four T's', the middle nodes/cysts, the posterior neurogenic tumours) and one tell-tale clinical syndrome each.
  • Group B: Build a decision flowchart for a suspected lung tumour that moves from presentation through 'confirm tumour → histology → stage' to the surgery-vs-chemotherapy branch point.
  • Group C: Prepare a short briefing on the cardiac-surgery trade-offs — CABG conduits for ischaemic disease and mechanical versus bioprosthetic valves — so the firm can counsel a patient choosing a valve type.

Learning Issues

Research these questions and bring your findings to the discussion.

  1. [SU26.3] How does the mediastinal compartment in which a mass lies predict its likely pathology, and what is the anterior-compartment 'four T's' differential?
  2. [SU26.3] What is the association between thymoma and myasthenia gravis, and how does it influence management?
  3. [SU26.4] What are the four characteristic presentations of lung cancer, and how is an apical (Pancoast) tumour linked to Horner's syndrome?
  4. [SU26.4] How do SCLC and NSCLC differ in location, paraneoplastic syndromes and principal treatment, and how do histology and stage together decide whether surgery helps?
  5. [SU26.1] What is the role of surgery in ischaemic, valvular and congenital heart disease, and how do mechanical and bioprosthetic valves differ in durability and anticoagulation requirements?