A 36-year-old healthy man presented with a suspicious pleural effusion on the left side that had been found on a pre-employment chest radiograph. He denied having any respiratory symptoms, and there was no history of trauma. On examination, he had decreased breath sounds and tactile fremitus on the left side. A posteroanterior chest radiograph showed blunting of the left costophrenic angle (Figure 1A), with more than 1 cm of shifting opacity seen on the lateral decubitus radiograph, consistent with free fluid (Figure 1B). Diagnostic thoracentesis failed to produce fluid.
A computed tomography scan of the chest showed a prominent peritoneal fat herniation through a left posterolateral diaphragmatic defect, with no evidence of pleural fluid collection (Figure 2). The patient refused further management and has remained symptom free.
A Bochdalek hernia, resulting from inadequate closure of the posterolateral pleuroperitoneal membrane, is the most common congenital diaphragmatic hernia, with an incidence of 1:2000 to 1:5000 live births. Congenital diaphragmatic hernias are usually found in neonates (approximately 10% of all reported cases occur in adults) and are associated with cardiac malformations and neural tube defects in up to 57% of patients. 1,2 Chromosomal abnormalities, including trisomy 18 or trisomy 21, have been described in 10% to 20% of all cases. Defects occur more frequently on the left side (78%) than on the right side of the diaphragm, and abdominal contents, including stomach, bowel loops, liver, spleen or fat tissues, can be displaced into the thoracic cavity. 3,4 Peritoneal fat, especially omental fat, tends to be mobile and can look like fluid on lateral decubitus chest radiographs.
Congenital hernias in neonates can be asymptomatic and can result in death secondary to respiratory insufficiency. In contrast, most congenital diaphragmatic hernias in adults are clinically silent. In 73% of adults, the hernia involves only omentum or fat. When symptoms do occur, they are relatively nonspecific and include chest or abdominal pain. 5 Bochdalek hernia can be misdiagnosed as pleural effusion, pneumonia, pneumothorax, lung cysts, mediastinal tumour and atelectasis. 1
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Previously published at www.cmaj.ca
This article has been peer reviewed.
Competing interests: None declared.
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