Abstract

No abstract available. Article truncated after 150 words. A 31-year-old man with a self-reported history significant for active methamphetamine and OxyContin use (last use of methamphetamine the same day with confirmation on urine drug screen) presented to the hospital with several hours of dyspnea. Having gone into cardiac arrest shortly after, he received several rounds of epinephrine and CPR and was intubated before spontaneous circulation returned. Bedside ultrasound revealed global hypokinesis with left ventricular ejection fraction of 10 to 15%, trivial pericardial effusion, and a moderate left pleural effusion. Chest CT (Figure 1) revealed segmental to subsegmental pulmonary emboli in the left lower lobe and ground-glass opacities in the left upper and bilateral lower lobes. He was treated as septic shock with Vancomycin and Cefepime, eventually speciating methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus in respiratory culture. Due to difficulty liberating the patient from the ventilator, he underwent tracheostomy tube placement. Chest x-ray on hospital day 18 showed a large left partially …

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