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Pleural Effusion in Adults—Etiology, Diagnosis, and Treatment
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Background: Pleural effusion is common in routine medical practice and can be due to many different underlying diseases. Precise differential diagnostic categorization is essential, as the treatment and prognosis of pleural effusion largely depend on its cause.
Methods: This review is based on pertinent publications retrieved by a selective search in PubMed and on the authors’ personal experience.
Results: The most common causes of pleural effusion are congestive heart failure, cancer, pneumonia, and pulmonary embolism. Pleural fluid puncture (pleural tap) enables the differentiation of a transudate from an exudate, which remains, at present, the foundation of the further diagnostic work-up. When a pleural effusion arises in the setting of pneumonia, the potential development of an empyema must not be overlooked. Lung cancer is the most common cause of malignant pleural effusion, followed by breast cancer. Alongside the treatment of the underlying disease, the specific treatment of pleural effusion ranges from pleurodesis, to thoracoscopy and video-assisted thoracoscopy (with early consultation of a thoracic surgeon), to the placement of a permanently indwelling pleural catheter.
Conclusion: The proper treatment of pleural effusion can be determined only after meticulous differential diagnosis. The range of therapeutic options has recently become much wider. More data can be expected in the near future concerning diagnostic testing for the etiology of the effusion, better pleurodetic agents, the development of interventional techniques, and the genetic background of the affected patients.


Pleural effusion, the pathological accumulation of fluid in the pleural space, is very common. It can be estimated, on the basis of registry data from the United States, that some 400 000 to 500 000 persons per year in Germany suffer from this condition (precise German figures are unavailable). Its causes vary widely, ranging from fairly harmless effusions accompanying viral pleuritis to prognostically highly relevant ones due to congestive heart failure or cancer. Patients with a non-malignant pleural effusion have a one-year mortality in the range of 25% to 57% (1). The need to treat a pleural effusion and the therapeutic options for it are largely a function of its cause, which thus needs to be precisely determined in every case.
Learning objectives
This article should enable the reader, whatever his or her medical specialty, to:
- name the potential causes and differential diagnoses of pleural effusion;
- know the most important steps in the diagnostic evaluation, depending on the likely cause; and
- gain an overview of the current therapeutic options.
Physiology and pathophysiology
Both the visceral and the parietal pleura play an important role in fluid homeostasis in the pleural space. The mean rate of both the production and the absorption of pleural fluid is normally 0.2 mL/kg/hr, which implies that the entire volume of the pleural fluid normally turns over within one hour (2). The parietal side of the pleura accounts for most of the production of pleural fluid, and for most of its resorption as well. Pleural effusion due to left-heart failure is an exception to this rule, in which the fluid comes from the visceral pleura. The volume of the pleural fluid is determined by the balance of the hydrostatic and oncotic pressure differences that are present between the systemic and pulmonary circulation and the pleural space (2). Pleural fluid is resorbed via lymphatic vessels in the parietal pleura. The flow in these vessels can increase by a factor of 20 if more than the usual amount of pleural fluid is produced; thus, the pleural lymphatic resorbing system has a large reserve capacity. In health, the production and resorption of pleural fluid are at equilibrium. A pleural effusion represents a disturbance of this equilibrium, probably because of both increased production and decreased resorption. Low oncotic pressure (e.g., in hypoalbuminemia), elevated pulmonary capillary pressure, increased permeability, lymphatic obstruction, and diminished negative intrapleural pressure are all pathophysiological components that lead to the clinically relevant and distinguishing features of a pleural effusion—transudate vs. exudate.
Clinical presentations
The presenting manifestations of pleural effusion are largely determined by the underlying disease (Table 1). Many patients have no symptoms that can be traced solely to the effusion itself. Such symptoms, if present, reflect an inflammatory response of the pleura, a restriction of pulmonary mechanics, or a disturbance of gas exchange.
The most common symptom arising from a pleural inflammatory response is pleuritic pain, which is mediated by the parietal pleura (the visceral pleura contains no nociceptors or nociceptive nerve fibers). The pain is usually felt in the region of the pathological abnormality, and it is often linked to the respiratory cycle. Such localized pleuritic pain improves or disappears as soon as a pleural effusion arises. Some patients describe a diffuse, painful sensation of pressure in the chest—particularly when the pathological process directly involves the parietal pleura, e.g., in the case of a pleural empyema, a primary malignant tumor, or pleural carcinomatosis. Pleural effusions in these situations are usually of the exudative type.
The most common symptom of pleural effusion is dyspnea. The severity of dyspnea is only loosely correlated with the size of the effusion (3). Large pleural effusions take up space in the chest that is normally filled by pulmonary parenchyma and are thus associated with a diminution of all lung volumes. Nor do the lung volumes immediately change when a pleural effusion (even a large one) is drained. The rapid clinical improvement of dyspnea after a pleural effusion is drained probably reflects the transition to a more favorable length-tension curve of the respiratory muscles, particularly the diaphragm (3).
Some patients complain of a dry cough, which can be explained as a manifestation of pleural inflammation or lung compression due to a large effusion. Pleural effusions can also markedly impair the quality of sleep (4).
The importance of the clinical history
After the initial determination that either a unilateral or a bilateral pleural effusion is present, the clinical history is very important. The patient should be asked about respiratory infections in the recent past, fever, weight loss, and malaise. The temporal course is highly relevant as well: Did the symptoms arise rapidly or over a longer time, perhaps over several weeks? What other, chronic illnesses does the patient have? Information about any history of heart disease is essential, as congestive heart failure is the commonest cause of bilateral pleural effusion. Some 75% of patients with pulmonary embolism and pleural effusion complain of pleuritic chest pain (5). The final important components of the clinical history are the drugs currently taken and any prior exposure to asbestos.
Physical examination
The breath sounds are uni- or bilaterally diminished or absent at the bases, and there is basal dullness to percussion. Tachypnea may be present if the effusion is large. A pleural rub can sometimes be heard in the initial stage of a parapneumonic effusion. In clinical practice, the determination whether a pleural effusion is uni- or bilateral is generally made from a chest x-ray. The history and physical examination serve as a guide to further testing and can often suggest with high accuracy whether a transudate or an exudate is present. If, for example, the patient displays the clinical signs of congestive heart failure, with peripheral edema, tachycardia, a third heart sound, distended neck veins, and bilateral dullness to percussion at the lung bases, then a pleural effusion of cardiac origin is highly likely, and we are thus probably dealing with a transudate rather than an exudate. In this situation, a diagnostic pleural tap can generally be dispensed with, and the treatment of the underlying illness is the main consideration.
If the examination reveals ascites in a patient with known hepatic cirrhosis along with evidence of a bilateral pleural effusion, hepatic hydrothorax is likely.
The situation is different when unilateral dullness to percussion points to a likely unilateral pulmonary effusion. The differential diagnosis is often difficult in such cases, and the probability of an exudate is much higher.
The causes of pleural effusion
Pleural effusion has a wide differential diagnosis. Its most common causes are congestive heart failure, cancer, pneumonia, and pulmonary embolism. A delayed etiological diagnosis can be associated with markedly higher morbidity and mortality, e.g., if the patient develops a pulmonary empyema on the basis of a parapneumonic effusion. The degree of prognostic relevance of a pleural effusion ranges all the way from innocuous (as when a pleural effusion is an accompanying radiological finding in a patient with viral pneumonia) to very serious (as in pulmonary embolism with secondary effusion formation, a diagnosis that is not infrequently missed).
Non-malignant pleural infusions are not infrequently indicators of a poor prognosis in patients with cardiac, renal, or hepatic failure, with a one-year mortality of 57%, 46%, and 25%, respectively (1).
A number of rarer diseases can be associated with pleural effusion, almost always of the exudative type. 30–50% of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus have a pleural effusion (“polyserositis”). Pleural effusion is also not infrequently seen in patients suffering from granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener disease), rheumatoid arthritis, and Langerhans-cell granulomatosis (5).
21% of patients suffering from idiopathic and familial pulmonary hypertension (iPAH und fPAH) have a pleural effusion, mostly unilateral (6).
One of the more common causes of unexplained pleural effusion is pulmonary embolism. 20–55% of patients with pulmonary embolism have a pleural effusion. The frequency of pleural effusion in pulmonary embolism is correlated with the severity of the embolism and with the occurrence of pulmonary infarction. Clinically, these patients are characterized by an apparent discrepancy between the volume of the effusion, which is often not very large, and the severe accompanying dyspnea (7).
An attempt is generally made to trace an unexplained pleural effusion to a single cause. In view of the aging of the population and the correspondingly increasing prevalence of multimorbidity, a prospective observational study was carried out to investigate the question of monocausality of pleural effusions. Bintcliffe et al. found that 70% of 126 patients with a pleural effusion did, indeed, have a single cause for it, but 30% had more than one cause. Multifactorial pleural effusion can present a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge (8) (Tables 1 and 2).
Drugs, too, can cause pleural effusion. Some that have been identified as causes include nitrofurantoin, dantrolene, methysergide, amiodarone, interleukin-2, procarbazine, methotrexate, clozapine, phenytoin, and beta-blockers. Physicians suspecting pleural effusion caused by a drug can consult www.pneumotox.com for further useful information.
Imaging techniques
If a pleural effusion is suspected, a chest x-ray should be obtained (Figure 1) (9). A postero-anterior view reveals effusions of volume 200 mL or larger, a lateral view effusions of volume 50 mL or larger. A lateral decubitus view can be used to confirm the free flow of the effusion around the lung.
Chest ultrasound is very useful (10) and is better than computerized tomography (CT) at revealing pleural septa. This is especially important if multiple punctures are needed. Ultrasound-assisted pleural puncture markedly lowers the risk of iatrogenic pneumothorax, with an odds ratio of 0.3 (95% confidence interval [0.2; 0.7] (11, 12). Ultrasound is particularly helpful for critically ill or ventilated patients in the supine position—a situation in which chest x-ray is less sensitive (13).
Chest CT reveals pleural effusions that cannot be seen on conventional chest x-rays. It can distinguish pleural fluid from pleural tissue proliferation, and it provides clues to the potential causes of the effusion (pneumonia, cancer, pulmonary embolism). If possible, it should be performed after an initial puncture with drainage of the effusion, because the effusion itself may hide relevant underlying pleural and pulmonary pathology. Chest CT with contrast is particularly useful in the diagnosis of pleural empyema and the delimitation of lung abscesses. Imaging criteria for distinguishing benign from malignant pleural changes have been prospectively validated (9), but chest CT cannot be used to distinguish pleural carcinosis from mesothelioma.
Indications for thoracentesis
A diagnostic puncture of a pleural effusion to obtain a small quantity of fluid (ca. 50 mL) is always indicated when the cause of the effusion is unclear. Puncture to obtain larger volumes is indicated to relieve effusion-related symptoms, such as dyspnea (9, 10). Timely thoracentesis or the insertion of a pleural drain is necessary if a pleural effusion is large and leads to respiratory or cardiac decompensation. An effusion in a patient with pneumonia should be tapped to rule out pleural empyema (14, 15).
Patients with bilateral pleural effusions do not always need to have a diagnostic or therapeutic tap; rather, any underlying disease that has been identified (congestive heart failure, nephrotic syndrome, etc.) should be treated. A diagnostic puncture is indicated if the patient has pleuritic chest pain, symptoms that are out of proportion to the size of the effusion, or an unexplained lack of response to treatment (9).
The puncture should be carried out under ultrasonographic guidance (10, 12).
The risk of iatrogenic pneumothorax after thoracentesis is 0.61–6.0 %. It is recommended that the patient be closely observed for 1–4 hr after the intervention, as pneumothorax usually becomes clinically evident during this time. For the same reason, a chest x-ray is generally not needed after thoracentesis as long as no new symptoms arise (11)
The tapping of pleural effusions under ultrasonic guidance plays an important role in intensive-care medicine, particularly in intubated and ventilated patients and for the diagnostic evaluation of smaller effusions of unknown cause (13)
Puncture for pleural effusion
Except in emergency situations (marked dyspnea, suspected pleural empyema), punctures for pleural effusion should be carried out during normal working hours, because punctures at other times are associated with higher procedure-related risks (pneumothorax, infection) (10).
Punctures or drain insertions that do not have to be performed on an emergency basis should be carried out in the setting of an INR that is less than 1.5. A current chest x-ray should be available, and the intervention should be performed under ultrasonographic guidance.
The puncture is performed under aseptic technique, generally with a 21-gauge needle and a 50 mL syringe outfitted with a three-way stopcock. Commercially available systems are helpful (10).
If pH measurement is indicated, a heparinized blood-gas syringe is used, which is kept closed until the measurement. The removed fluid is divided into aliquots for microbiological (5 mL), biochemical (2–5 mL), and cytological (20–40 mL) analysis. Blood-culture bottles increase the sensitivity for the detection of bacterial pathogens, especially anaerobes. Sending pleural fluid in blood-culture bottles is not recommended for the detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (16).
Analysis of the pleural fluid
Macroscopic appearance
The gross appearance of the fluid may already provide clues to the diagnosis. Milky fluid is typical of chylothorax, pus is proof of empyema, and a bloody effusion is more common when a malignancy is the cause (as long as the tap itself has not caused iatrogenic bleeding). Chylothorax can be distinguished from empyema by centrifugation: chylous fluid remains milky, but empyema fluid displays a clear supernatant (17).
Distinguishing transudates from exudates
Whether a pleural effusion is a transudate or an exudate determines its further evaluation and treatment (18). Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and protein are measured in order to differentiate the two possibilities. The distinguishing criteria have proven their worth in many years of use (19) and are 99.5% sensitive for the diagnosis of an exudate. They can correctly tell the difference between a transudate and an exudate in 93–96% of cases (9, 20). Cholesterol measurement can also help: a cholesterol concentration above 55 mg/dL combined with an LDH concentration above 200 U/mL is highly specific for the presence of an exudate.
It must be borne in mind, however, that diuretic drugs given to treat congestive heart failure can elevate the concentrations of protein, LDH, and lipids in a pleural effusion, and that obtainng effusion fluid by pleural tap after cardiac decompensation has already occurred can lead to the incorrect identification of an exudate, which will be followed by further unnecessary diagnostic testing (9).
pH values
If an infectious cause is suspected for a non-purulent pleural effusion, its pH should be tested by an appropriate method. Pleural fluid acidosis is found in complicated pleural infections, tuberculosis, rheumatoid arthritis, and malignant effusions. Among patients with malignant effusions, acidosis of the effusion fluid is correlated with shorter survival; these patients generally have more extensive disease and a lower chance of successful pleurodesis (21). If the pH is less than 7.2, a pleural drain should be inserted without delay, even if the effusion is clearly of parapneumonic origin (15). A meta-analysis (18) has shown that low pH is the best indicator of a complicated course of parapneumonic pleural effusion.
Glucose, amylase
The glucose concentration is normally the same in pleural fluid as in the blood. A low glucose concentration in a pleural effusion is found in empyema, tuberculosis, malignancy, and rheumatoid arthritis (9). One in two patients with acute pancreatitis has a pleural effusion with an elevated amylase concentration (9).
NTproBNP
N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide, or NTproBNP for short, is a sensitive biomarker for systolic and diastolic heart failure, and its concentrations in the blood and in pleural effusion fluid are very closely correlated. Even if an effusion is found to be of the exudative type, an elevated NTproBNP level makes it very likely that congestive heart failure is the cause. Measurement of the NTproBNP level in peripheral blood suffices in most cases. A negative NTproBNP finding in the blood rules out congestive heart failure as the cause of a pleural effusion with near-absolute certainty (22).
Differential blood-cell count
A differential blood-cell count in the pleural effusion fluid can further narrow down the differential diagnosis. An elevated concentration of neutrophils is often seen in acute processes, such as parapneumonic effusion, empyema, and effusion due to pulmonary embolism. On the other hand, a predominantly lymphocytic picture is more common in tuberculosis, longstanding pleural effusions, congestive heart failure, or malignant etiology (9). Nonetheless, the differential blood-cell count in the pleural fluid alone does not enable precise determination of the cause of the effusion.
Microbiological diagnostic evaluation
Gram staining can help identify the underlying pathogen. The microbiological identification of a pathogenic organism in a non-purulent parapneumonic effusion succeeds in only 25% of cases (23). Microbiological investigation yields a large percentage of false-negative findings.
Application of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with use of the 16S-rRNA gene improves sensitivity compared to conventional culture techniques (24, 25).
If tuberculous pleuritis is suspected, microbiological examination and culture should be performed (16). If possible, 30–50 mL of fresh, untreated puncture fluid should be sent for mycobacterial diagnostic testing (caveat: not in blood-culture bottles) (16).
The number of tubercle bacilli in the pleural fluid is usually low. Microbiological examination has less than 5% sensitivity for the detection of acid-fast bacilli; culture yields a somewhat higher sensitivity of 10–20 % (9). PCR is often insufficiently informative because there are endogenous inhibitor substances in the effusion fluid (16). In unclear cases, further invasive diagnostic procedures must be performed, e.g., pleural biopsy or video-assisted thoracoscopy (VATS) with culture and histological detection of caseating epithelioid-cell granulomata.
Cytology
In approximately 50% of lung cancers (26) and 60% of all cancers taken together (9), the malignant nature of a pleural effusion can be confirmed cytologically. The yield of positive tumor diagnoses is highest for adeno-carcinoma and lower for mesothelioma, squamous-cell carcinoma, lymphoma, and sarcoma. A 20–60 mL sample of the effusion fluid should be sent for cytological examination. The medium to be used should be ascertained in advance by communication with the cytopathology laboratory. For the diagnosis of mesothelioma, histological examination is always advisable.
Tumor markers
There is insufficient evidence to support the routine measurement of tumor markers in pleural effusion fluid, or of serum tumor markers, for the etiological categorization of pleural effusions of unclear origin. The role of mesothelin in patients with mesothelioma cannot yet be conclusively judged. In one study, the use of a multiplex protein biochip with 120 biomarkers enabled the differentiation of a malignant from a tuberculous effusion, and of an effusion due to adenocarcinoma of the lung from one due to mesothelioma (27) (Box, Table 3, Figure 2).
The need for further diagnostic studies
If the imaging findings and the analysis of the pleural effusion fluid are inconclusive, pleural biopsy may be needed. CT-guided needle biopsy of the pleura is markedly more sensitive for the diagnosis of malignant pleural changes than the previously common biopsy procedure with an Abrams needle (9).
If a patient is already known to have lung cancer with a pleural effusion, but no malignant cells are found in the tapped pleural effusion fluid, a VATS or “internal-medical” thoracoscopy should be performed before any local treatment with curative intent (surgery, radiotherapy) (26). Thoracoscopy has the advantage of enabling direct inspection of the pleural surface, targeted tissue sampling, and, if necessary, pleurodesis (a procedure causing the two pleural surfaces to adhere to each other).
If the patient simultaneously has hemoptysis, bronchial obstruction, or an intrapulmonary mass seen on a thoracic imaging study, bronchoscopy is indicated.
The special features of malignant pleural effusion
A pleural effusion in a patient with cancer is associated with a poor prognosis, but this is highly variable. Patients with hematologic malignancies or pleural mesothelioma live almost a year on average, while patients with lung cancer have the worst prognosis, with an average survival time of only 2–3 months (28). The LENT score enables a sufficiently precise stratification into high-, intermediate-, and low-risk groups; this can aid in decision-making regaqrding the invasiveness of further treatment (29).
Most malignant pleural effusions cause symptoms, and the spatial extent of pleural effusions is correlated with the probability of malignant disease, i.e., the larger a (unilateral) effusion is, the more likely that cancer is the cause. Lung cancer is the most common cause, accounting for more than one-third of cases, followed by breast cancer (16.8%) and malignant lymphoma (11.5%). The choice among the available treatment options should be made on the basis of the symptoms, clinical condition of the patient, type of tumor, response to systemic treatment, and re-expansion of the lung after a therapeutic tap. These options include:
- expectant management (watching and waiting),
- therapeutic emptying of the pleural space by puncture,
- insertion of a pleural drain and instillation of a pleurodetic agent,
- pleurodesis via thoracoscopy, and
- insertion of a pleural catheter.
Therapeutic puncture is always indicated for patients who are acutely dyspneic because of a large effusion. No more than 1.5 L of effusion fluid should be removed at one time. Therapeutic puncture is usually followed by recurrence of the effusion, and thus pleurodesis is indicated for patients whose life expectancy is greater than 1 month. Repeated pleural punctures are not only stressful for the patient; they also very commonly lead to the formation of adhesions and to loculation of the effusion, so that complete emptying is no longer possible (Table 4; see eBox 1 for details on pleurodesis and tunneled pleural catheters).
The special features of pleural infections
Patients with pneumonia who additionally develop a parapneumonic pleural effusion have a higher mortality (31). The same is true to an even larger extent of pleural empyema, a condition whose incidence is increasing (32, 33). The mortality of nosocomial pleural infections is significantly higher than that of community-acquired ones (47 % versus 17 % [34]). Delays in the diagnosis of an empyema and delays of proper drainage treatment are especially dangerous. These measures must be taken without delay after antibiotic treatment is initiated in conformity with the existing guidelines (15). The option of early thoracic-surgical intervention should be decided on by an interdisciplinary treatment team (35) (for hepatic hydrothorax, see eBox 2). A new study of VATS in the management of parapneumonic pleural empyema underscores the high success rate of early intervention but nonetheless reveals a high mortality (in-hospital mortality of 8.1%), particularly when the appropriate diagnosis and treatment are delayed (36).
The incidence of pleural effusion
It can be estimated, on the basis of registry data from the United States, that some 400 000 to 500 000 persons per year in Germany suffer from pleural effusion.
The spectrum of causes
The causes of pleural effusion vary widely, ranging from fairly harmless effusions accompanying viral pleuritis to prognostically highly relevant ones due to congestive heart failure or cancer.
Clinical presentation
The presenting manifestations of pleural effusion are largely determined by the underlying disease. Congestive heart failure is the most common cause.
Dyspnea
The most common symptom of pleural effusion is dyspnea. The severity of dyspnea is only loosely correlated with the size of the effusion.
Lung volumes
Large pleural effusions take up space in the chest that is normally filled by pulmonary parenchyma and are thus associated with a diminution of all lung volumes.
Chest x-ray
In clinical practice, the determination whether a pleural effusion is uni- or bilateral is generally made from a chest x-ray.
Multimorbidity
In view of the aging of the population and the correspondingly increasing prevalence of multimorbidity, pleural effusions often have more than one cause.
Imaging studies
If a pleural effusion is suspected, a chest x-ray should be obtained. Chest ultrasound is better than computerized tomography (CT) at revealing pleural septa.
Diagnostic puncture
A diagnostic puncture of a pleural effusion to obtain a small quantity of fluid (ca. 50 mL) is always indicated when the cause of the effusion is unclear.
Decompensation
Timely thoracentesis or the insertion of a pleural drain is necessary if a pleural effusion is large and leads to respiratory or cardiac decompensation.
Transudate or exudate
Whether a pleural effusion is a transudate or an exudate determines its further evaluation and treatment.
Acidosis
Pleural fluid acidosis is found in complicated pleural infections, tuberculosis, rheumatoid arthritis, and malignant effusions.
Differential blood-cell count
A differential blood-cell count in the pleural effusion fluid can help narrow down the differential diagnosis. Nonetheless, the differential blood-cell count alone does not enable precise determination of the cause.
Malignant pleural effusion
Lung cancer is the most common cause of malignant pleural effusion, accounting for more than one-third of cases, followed by breast cancer (16.8%) and malignant lymphoma (11.5%).
Pleural biopsy
If the imaging findings and the analysis of the pleural effusion fluid are inconclusive, pleural biopsy may be needed for the further evaluation of malignant pleural changes.
Therapeutic puncture
Repeated pleural punctures very commonly lead to the formation of adhesions and to loculation of the effusion, so that complete emptying is no longer possible.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors state that they have no conflict of interest.
Manuscript submitted on 14 January 2019, revised version accepted on 6 May 2019.
Translated from the original German by Ethan Taub, M.D.
Corresponding author
Prof. Dr. med. Berthold Jany
Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg
Cite this as:
Jany B, Welte T: Pleural effusion in adults—etiology, diagnosis, and treatment. Dtsch Arztebl Int 2019; 116: 377– 86. DOI: 10.3238/arztebl.2019.0377
►Supplementary material
eBoxes:
www.aerzteblatt-international.de/19m0377
Radiology Dept., Klinikum Würzburg Mitte, with the kind permission of Prof. H.-J. Langen
Department of Respiratory Medicine, Hannover Medical School: Prof. Dr. med. Tobias Welte
Klinikum Würzburg Mitte, Standort Missioklinik Pneumologie
Adalbert-Stifter-Weg 16, D-97082 Würzburg, Germany
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