Chylothorax is a medical condition where lymphatic fluid (chyle) accumulates in the pleural cavity due to disruption or obstruction of the thoracic duct. It typically presents with chest pain or dyspnea and may lead to nutritional and immune complications if not managed. The term combines 'chyle' (lymph with fat) and 'thorax' (chest).
"The patient developed a chylothorax after thoracic surgery, requiring drainage."
"Imaging confirmed chylothorax as the cause of the persistent pleural effusion."
"Management includes dietary modifications to reduce chyle production and, in some cases, surgical repair of the duct."
"Chylothorax can lead to malnutrition and immunosuppression if lipid-rich lymph leaks continue."
Chylothorax derives from Greek chylos meaning 'juice' or 'milky fluid', thorax for 'chest', and the combining form -thorax indicating involvement of the chest cavity. The term reflects the milky lymphatic fluid (chyle) that leaks into the pleural space when the thoracic duct is disrupted or obstructed. The concept emerged in medical literature as surgeons and clinicians described postoperative pleural effusions rich in triglycerides, lipids, and chylomicrons, distinguishing chylothorax from other pleural effusions. First known uses trace to early 20th-century discussions of lymphatic injuries in thoracic surgery, with precise imaging-based confirmations appearing mid-century. Over time, the diagnosis has expanded beyond post-surgical etiologies to include traumatic, congenital, and malignant causes, but the essential meaning remains a chyle-containing effusion in the chest cavity.
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Words that rhyme with "Chylothorax"
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Pronounce as /ˌkaɪl.oʊˈθɔːr.æks/ for US and /ˌkaɪl.oʊˈθɔː.ræks/ in UK; stress on the second-to-last syllable 'thor' (thɔː). Start with 'ky'-like ch (as in 'ky-lose'), then 'lo' as 'loh', then emphasis on 'thor', ending with 'ax' (aks). The rhythm is da-DUM da-da, with the 'th' as a soft voiceless dental fricative; ensure the '/l/' is clear and the '/r/' is lightly pronounced in non-rhotic accents.
Common errors: misplacing stress (trying to stress the 'chyl' or 'thor' incorrectly), mispronouncing 'th' as 't' or 'd', and swallowing the final 'ax' as a dull 'aks' without proper vowel quality. Correct by emphasizing 'thor' with the /ɔː/ vowel and keeping /θ/ as a soft dental fricative. Practice saying 'kylo-thor-ax' with clear separation between syllables and full vowel in /ɔː/.
US/UK/AU share the same core sounds, but rhoticity affects the final /r/ in non-rhotic contexts. US typically rhymes 'thorax' with a clear /r/ before the final /æks/, while UK may drop postvocalic /r/ and reduce some vowels slightly. Australian tends to be non-rhotic but with subtle vowel shifts, keeping /θ/ and /æks/ similar. IPA transcriptions reflect /ˌkaɪloʊˈθɔːræks/ (US) vs /ˌkaɪləˈθɔːræks/ (UK).
Two main challenges: the initial 'chyl' cluster with 'y' producing /aɪ/ as in 'fly', and the 'thorax' ending with a voiceless velar /ks/ preceded by a stressed /ɔː/ that can blur in rapid speech. The /θ/ dental fricative requires precise tongue placement behind the upper teeth. Break it into segments and practice the sequence: /kaɪl/ + /o/ + /θɔː/ + /ræks/ with clear boundary between syllables.
A distinctive feature is the two-consonant cluster ending -thorax, where the sequence /θɔːr/ or /θɔːr/ must smoothly transition into the final /æks/. The 'th' is voiced as voiceless dental fricative; keep the air stream steady and avoid adding an extra schwa between 'thor' and 'ax'.
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