A 22-year-old woman presented with hemoptysis and dyspnea (respiratory rate, 38 breaths/min; peripheral oxygen saturation, 81%; pro-brain natriuretic peptide, 2,073 ng/L), together with bilateral inspiratory crackles and a diastolic murmur over the apex. Imaging showed multifo-cal consolidations surrounded by ground-glass opacities, predominantly in the upper lobes (Figure 1), and no pulmonary embolism. Bronchos-copy showed no endobronchial blood but prominent bronchial vasculature on the left (Figure 2). The BAL fluid was consistently bloody (90% hemosiderin-laden alveolar macrophages). Echocardiography detected severe mitral stenosis with classic "hockey stick" morphology of the anterior leaflet and mild aortic regurgitation. The mean pulmonary artery pressure was 48 mmHg, and the pulmonary artery wedge pressure was 32 mmHg. Mitral valve reconstruction was performed.
Mitral stenosis can provoke hemoptysis.(1) Dilatation of the bronchial vasculature may be the first hint of elevated left atrial pressure. The bronchial venous plexus arising from the bronchial arterial circulation is connected to the pulmonary venous circulation. Two thirds of the blood from the venous plexus returns to the pulmonary veins and then to the left atrium.(2,3) An increase in pulmonary venous pressure leads to a reverse flow of blood from the pulmonary veins to the bronchial venous plexus, visible as engorged bronchial vasculature.
RECOMMENDED READING1. Wood P. An appreciation of mitral stenosis. I. Clinical features. Br Med J. 1954;1(4870):1051-63; contd. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.1.4870.1051
2. Ohmichi M, Tagaki S, Nomura N, Tsunematsu K, Suzuki A. Endobronchial changes in chronic pulmonary venous hypertension. Chest. 1988;94(6):1127-32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1378/chest.94.6.1127
3. BAILE EM. THE ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF THE BRONCHIAL CIRCULATION. J AEROSOL MED. 1996;9(1):1-6. HTTP://DX.DOI.ORG/10.1089/JAM.1996.9.1