CLINICAL AND ETIOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF UNILATERAL PLEURAL EFFUSION
Nidhi Sahu, Aashish Kumar Singh, Vinayak Mangal
GLOBAL JOURNAL FOR RESEARCH ANALYSIS · 2025-09
Abstract
Introduction: Unilateral pleural effusion (UPE) has varied causes, notably tuberculosis (TB), malignancy, and parapneumonic infections. In India, TB remains a leading etiology, but regional data are essential for targeted management. Our study aimed to assess the clinical, demographic, biochemical, and etiological proles of UPE in a tertiary care center in Rajasthan. Methods: This cross-sectional study included 150 adults with conrmed UPE at Institute of Respiratory Diseases, SMS Medical College, Jaipur (1st Oct 2023–31st Sept 2024). Clinical evaluation, imaging, pleural uid analysis (biochemistry, ADA, cytology, CBNAAT), and Light’s criteria were applied. Results: Mean age was 52.4 years; 62.7% were males and 58% from rural areas. Dyspnea (94.7%), fever (78.7%), and cough (72%) were common. TB was the most frequent cause (41.3%), followed by malignancy (25.3%), parapneumonic effusions (18.7%), and cardiac causes (8%). Most effusions (89.3%) were exudative. ADA was signicantly elevated in TB cases (mean 68.4 ± 24.6 U/L; p < 0.001), with an AUC of 0.92 at 30 U/L cutoff (sensitivity 91.9%, specicity 84.1%). Cytology had a 73.7% yield in malignancy. Conclusion: In our study, Tuberculosis was found to be most common cause of unilateral pleural effusion. ADA is a reliable marker for tuberculous pleuritis. Malignancy and parapneumonic effusions are also signicant. Region-specic use of ADA and Light’s criteria is crucial in high-burden settings.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Etiology
- Parapneumonic effusion
- Malignancy
- Tuberculosis
- Pleural effusion
- Internal medicine
- Surgery
- Gastroenterology
- Effusion
- Radiology
- Cytology
- Tertiary care