We are the combination of four hospitals: the General Hospital, the Children’s Hospital, the Women’s Hospital and the Traumatology, Rehabilitation and Burns Hospital. We are part of the Vall d’Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus: a world-leading health park where healthcare plays a crucial role.
Patients are the centre and the core of our system. We are professionals committed to quality care and our organizational structure breaks down the traditional boundaries between departments and professional groups, with an exclusive model of knowledge areas.
Would you like to know what your stay at Vall d'Hebron will be like? Here you will find all the information.
The commitment of Vall d'Hebron University Hospital to innovation allows us to be at the forefront of medicine, providing first class care adapted to the changing needs of each patient.
Lung cancer is the general name for neoplastic lung disease in which there is the presence of tumour cells. There are different types of lung cancer, but all of them share tobacco use as a risk factor. It is usually detected by the symptoms it causes, but it can also be an incidental finding in an examination conducted for a different reason.
Lung cancer originates when a set of cancer cells proliferates and produces a local compromise in the space occupied. These cells have a tendency to spread (metastasis) to other organs and, as their biological behaviour is completely abnormal, they produce atypical neurological, dermatological or endocrine signs. There are different types of lung cancer from a cell classification perspective, which require different treatments and prognosis. Lung cancer is always a serious illness, with an overall low survival rate estimated at 20% of patients after 5 years.
Research into this disease in the last few years has led to new treatment strategies, which in some cases cause the disease to go into remission for long periods.
90% of people will have symptoms caused by local tumour growth, including non-specific respiratory symptoms such as coughing and difficulty breathing, or in some cases coughing up blood.
There can also be a wide variety of symptoms: pleural effusion (presence of fluid in the pleura), involvement of the nerve roots that pass through the chest, skin disorders and endocrine disorders because the tumour may produce products that are similar to normal hormones.
It affects both sexes, with a predominance in males. Incidence of lung cancer in women has shown a very worrying increase in the last few years. Although it can be seen in people who have never smoked, a history of smoking is almost always found.
A suspected diagnosis will be made in the clinic and imaging tests will then be conducted in the following order: Chest x-ray, CAT, PET-CT to confirm the suspicion. The types of cells involved will then be ascertained through pleural tap or bronchoscopy. Final diagnosis is always reached by confirming the presence of tumour cells, which is done by the Pathological Anatomy Department.
Lung cancer treatment must be personalised. Surgery can play its role, both in diagnosis and in treatment, as well as radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy and the use of biological drugs aimed at blocking certain cell receptor, which are different in each patient.
The typical tests for diagnosis are chest radiography, CAT, PET-CT, pleural aspiration/tap and bronchoscopy.
In order to prevent lung cancer, completely abstaining from tobacco use is essential. Exposure to certain environmental toxins specific to some working environments, such as arsenic, asbestos and chrome should also be avoided.
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is the most common degenerative motor neurone disease in adults. It is also known as Charcot disease after the famous French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot who discovered it in 1869. In North America, it is known as Lou Gherig’s disease in honour of a famous baseball player who died at 38 years old as a result of this disease.
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis manifests in the form of progressive paralysis that affects most of the muscles in the diaphragm. The life expectancy is less than five years. In rare cases, longer survival times may be observed, especially if artificial ventilation devices are provided.
ALS is a neurodegenerative disease caused by the death of motor neurons in the brain and the spinal cord.
There are two types of motor neuron: upper and lower. The first are found in the motor cortex and establish connections with the lower motor neurons located in the brain stem and spinal cord, which innervate muscles. When the upper motor neurons die, spasticity, weakness and hyperreflexia appear.
When the lower motor neurons die, twitching, weakness and muscle atrophy occur. Other neuron populations can also be affected, such as the temporal and frontal behavioural and executive circuits.
Epidemiologically speaking, ALS has an incidence of 1.5-2 new cases a year per 100,000 people (3 new cases are diagnosed per day in Spain). The total number of cases (prevalence) is 2-5 per 100,000. According to this data, the total number of patient with ALS in Spain is approximately 4,000 cases. This is why it is included in the rare or minority disease group.
90% of cases of ALS are sporadic (no family history). Around 10% of ALS cases are familial, usually inherited as dominant traits. The incorporation of new molecular genetics techniques in the field of research has allowed more than 25 genes involved in ALS to be identified.
As a consequence of the continuous decrease in motor neurons, symptoms of the disease appear. These usually depend on the location of the motor neurons undergoing the most advanced processes of degeneration. In most patients (70%) the first symptom is loss of strength with muscular atrophy in the hands or clumsiness when walking, with frequent falls. In approximately 25% of patients, the first symptom is difficulty talking or swallowing, which indicates that degeneration of the bulbar motor neuron population is the most intense. There are also other possibilities for clinical presentation of this disease, although much less frequent: respiratory failure, weight loss or unexplained lack of energy (asthenia), cramps and twitches in the absence of muscle weakness, spasticity in legs, rapid mood changes or cognitive impairment.
In advanced phases, the disease can also paralyse the eye muscles. In the final stages of the disease, paralysis of the respiratory muscles leads to respiratory failure, which is often the cause of death.
The condition particularly affects people aged between 40 and 70. The incidence is greater in men (3:2.2 per 100,000) in sporadic forms. The age of first onset of symptoms reaches its peak between 58 and 63 years old in sporadic cases and between 47 and 52 years in familial forms. Incidence decreases markedly after the age of 80. The risk of suffering ALS is 1:400 for women and 1:350 for men.
The differing ways in which ALS manifests is one of the two reasons for a delay in suspected diagnosis of the disease, which can be up to 15 months. The other is that there is no test or biomarker to objectively confirm the diagnosis in the initial stages of the condition. A diagnosis of ALS is a diagnosis of exclusion, based on clinical criteria and conducting tests (MRI, clinical analysis, genetic tests, electromyography, EMTC, neuropsychological exam, nuclear medicine techniques and others) to rule out other illnesses with similar clinical findings. In most specialised ALS units, the disease diagnostic criteria used are the revised El Escorial criteria and the Awaji-shima criteria.
There is currently no medication that can cure or stop the disease. Riluzole and Edaravone are the only medications approved for ALS treatment, although their effect on survival is moderate (months).
The European (EFNS) and American (ANA) associations of neurology recommend that patients with ALS be treated in specialised centres, where possible in multidisciplinary units, so that they might be prepared for any complications. These units should offer solutions to control the symptoms, including the use of a feeding tube, control of saliva secretions, cough assist devices, respirators for mechanical ventilation, technology to improve the patient’s ability to move around and facilitate communication in patients who have lost the ability to speak.
These multidisciplinary units are the centres preferred by those running new drug trials.
The reality is that there is currently no effective treatment, although patients and their relatives often desperately search online for miracle drugs that might cure the condition. ALSuntangled, a group made up of 80 international experts in ALS, was born with the aim of protecting these patients from the numerous products advertised. It mission is to review the veracity and safety of the alternative treatments offered online that have not gone through the proper regulatory channels. It publishes its results in the official magazine for the disease and on its website.
Diagnostic imaging techniques (MRI, CAT, PET), electrophysiology (electromyography, EMTC, PESs), laboratory analysis (haematology, biochemistry, antibodies, hormones, enzymes, serology, genetics), respiratory functional tests, gasometry, pulse oximetry, overnight pulse oximetry, capnography, BMI, calorimetry, lumbar puncture, functional scale for the disease (ALS-FRS-R). A muscular biopsy may be required in exceptional cases. It is advisable to admit the patient in order to arrange for testing and offer them a report on discharge detailing the ALS diagnostic category and degree of functional repercussion (ALS-FRS-R).
Although various environmental risk factors have been suggested (geographic, occupational, dietary habits, proximity to electrical channels, contact with pesticides or other neurotoxins), there is no agreement on preventative measures to take.
In family forms, it is possible to offer genetic counselling to people with a desire for offspring.
During the natural course of the disease, complications often appear that may be prevented and treated. Among the most significant are malnutrition, respiratory failure, hypersalivation, spasticity, pain, loss of independent movement and communication, depression, anxiety, sleep disorders, bed sores, cognitive deficits and burden on carers.
The Multidisciplinary ALS Unit in the Neurology Department at Vall d’Hebron University Hospital is accredited by the Generalitat de Catalunya, Spanish Government (CSUR) and by the European Reference Network for Rare Neuromuscular Diseases (EURO-NMD).
Professionals from the following specialisms make up this unit: Case handling, nursing, social care, neurology, pneumology, rehabilitation, nutritional support, neuropsychology, physiotherapy, speech therapy, endoscopy, interventional radiology, technicians for increasing communication (UTAC).
The coordinator is Dr. Josep Gamez.
Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disorder that affects the lungs, the digestive system and other organs in the body.
Cystic fibrosis affects the cells that produce mucus, sweat and digestive enzymes. Bodily secretions that are usually fluid and not viscous become more viscous. Instead of acting as a lubricant, the viscous secretions form layers, especially in the lung and pancreas.
Patients with cystic fibrosis have a much higher level of salt in their sweat than normal.
The age at which symptoms appear varies, depending on the intensity of the disease in each person. Currently screening for cystic fibrosis is conducted in the first few days of a baby’s life, allowing a diagnosis to be made within a month of birth, much earlier than symptoms are likely to develop. Normally, symptoms appear within the first few months or years of life, although in some patients they may appear during adolescence or in adulthood. There has been an improvement in the quality of life of patients with cystic fibrosis compared to previous decades. Although cystic fibrosis requires daily treatment measures to control it, patients can still go to school and work.
The most common symptoms in small children are fatty deposits, delay in gaining weight, and repeated bronchitis and respiratory infections. Older children and adults may suffer from sinusitis, diabetes, pancreatitis or fertility problems.
It affects children and adults more or less severely depending on whether the illness has a mild or severe form of manifestation.
All new-borns are screened using a blood test to detect immunoreactive trypsinogen.
The sweat test (amount of salt in the sweat) is an important diagnostic test. It is done by stimulating the skin to increase sweat and measuring the amount of chloride secreted. In cystic fibrosis there is an increased amount of chloride and sodium.
Diagnosis is confirmed using genetic testing to look for mutations of the CFTR gene (Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane conductance Regulator). This gene is involved in the passage of salt through the membranes of the body.
It is very important that patients be attended in a specialised multidisciplinary Unit.
There is currently no definitive cure, although there is a lot of research in this field and in the future it is probable that we will be able to change the natural course of this illness with new drugs that come onto the market.
Treatment is aimed at maintaining lung function, avoiding respiratory infections and improving the absorption of foods and nutrition. Breathing exercises are essential. These breathing exercises maintain adequate ventilation of the lungs and in some cases are accompanied by inhalation of a solution of sodium chloride, other fluidifying substances or antibiotics.
The relevant preventive vaccinations should be administered (flu, pneumococcal, etc.). The Cystic Fibrosis Unit designs a treatment plan for each patient, which varies over time and according to the evolution of the condition.
From a digestive point of view, pancreatic function can be helped by taking pancreatic enzymes orally and promoting the absorption of foods.
In some cases, if the disease is very advanced, a lung transplant may be needed. Treatments are improving all the time and need to be administered less and less frequently.
Screening for immunoreactive trypsinogen in the blood, the sweat test, genetic analysis.
Complementary tests that may be useful include blood tests to look at vitamin levels, among other things, chest x-ray, chest CAT scan, functional respiratory tests (spirometry) and stool analysis.
Early detection is currently a reality and allows early treatment as symptoms develop.
Infectious disease caused by the microorganism Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which mainly affects the respiratory system and requires prolonged and uninterrupted treatment to cure. If treatment is interrupted, it can become resistant to drugs, which makes it harder to cure.
The reservoir of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is humans and it is usually an airborne disease. Transmission is caused by living in close proximity to someone with pulmonary tuberculosis. It is important to be aware that we are talking about a disease that can be treated, cured and eradicated, which means that it could disappear from the human population.
At the moment, however, it is the primary cause of death from infectious disease on the planet. Factors such as resistance to first-line drugs or coinfection make it difficult to treat the disease and increase its mortality rate.
The symptoms of tuberculosis depend on the organ that is infected. In the case of pulmonary tuberculosis, the most common symptoms are chesty cough, fever, weight loss and sweating at night. A diagnosis of tuberculosis should be considered when these symptoms last for more than 3-4 weeks.
It can affect anyone who has been in contact with infected patients.
Tuberculosis is diagnosed according to the patient’s symptomatology, the findings of a physical examination and the results of complementary testing. Microbiological tests constitute an essential pillar for diagnosis. Some tests include micobacteria cultures, microscopic techniques and evidence of molecular biology.
Patients have a confirmed diagnosis when the microbiological tests are positive. If they are not positive, they are said to have a probable diagnosis.
Conducted by means of several drugs to avoid resistance. The length of treatment is prolonged (minimum six months) because many drugs acts on the dividing bacteria and this microorganism is slow growing. Where possible, all tablets are administered in one single sitting per day to make following the treatment plan easier.
Chest x-rays, general tests, cultures of biological samples.
There are no specific prevention measures to avoid infection.
Minority diseases, also called rare diseases, are those that affect between 5% and 7% of the population. They are very varied, affecting different parts of the body with a wide range of symptoms that change both between diseases and within the same disease. It is estimated that some 30 million people in the EU, 3 million in Spain, and around 350,000 in Catalonia suffer from one.
The complexity of most rare diseases requires multidisciplinary care with professionals from different medical specialities, case management for nursing, psychological support and also social work.
The Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus is home to more than 100 specialist professionals dedicated to the care of more than 2,000 rare diseases. Apart from treating the most rare diseases of any centre in Spain, it is one of the leading hospitals in Europe in this field. In fact, Vall d'Hebron is part of 20 European reference networks, known as ERN. This makes this hospital a highly specialised centre for rare diseases, from birth to adulthood, through a networked system that allows sharing of resources and knowledge with other world-class hospitals.
Adult and child
Pediatric
This concentration of patients with rare diseases at Vall d'Hebron improves knowledge and promotes research. Research in this field focuses above all on improving diagnostic capacity for diseases that are often difficult to diagnose and on developing new treatments for those diseases. In the case of diseases with few patients, publicly funded research is often the main avenue for the discovery of new drugs, and public health is the framework that provides the public with access to high medication complexity.
For more information, contact the Rare Disease Team at the following email address: minoritaries@vallhebron.cat
Neuromuscular disease is a chronic illness that results in serious disability, loss of independence, and with significant psychosocial consequences. Respiratory alterations are the main cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with neuromuscular diseases. They are significantly affected by the evolution of the disease and are the reason for multiple hospital admissions where the patient’s life is seriously endangered.
The main causes of respiratory impairment are hypoventilation due to weak inspiratory muscles and a lack of ability to cough due to weak expiratory muscles. Ventilatory support via non-invasive mechanical ventilation or tracheotomy can prevent or reverse ventilatory failure in these patients.
The loss of expiratory strength means that patients are unable to expel bronchial secretions. If the bulbar muscles are also affected and patients run the risk of inhaling saliva, the contents of the mouth or food, this can induce multiple respiratory infections, pneumonia and atelectasis which results in obstruction of the airway and seriously endangers the patient's life.
The combination of non-invasive mechanical ventilation to assist coughing decreases morbidity and hospital admissions for these patients.
There are currently around 60,000 people with the condition in Spain.
In the Cardiorespiratory Rehabilitation Unit, we monitor maximal inspiratory and expiratory pressure (MIP and MEP) and peak expiratory flow (PEF), also known as peak cough flow (PCF) and carry out spirometry.
Treatment goals are focused on controlling the evolution of the ventilatory failure and avoiding or improving episodes of respiratory failure. To achieve these objectives, manual techniques or equipment have to be used. These are techniques to encourage pulmonary expansion, manually assist coughing, and others.
One very important objective is to train the main carer in physiotherapy techniques in order to avoid possible complications in the respiratory system.
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a disorder of the arteries that connect the lungs to the heart. Symptoms are shortness of breath or laboured breathing (dyspnoea).
Pulmonary arterial hypertension is a rare and serious condition that affects the pulmonary artery system. As the disease progresses, blood flow reduces. To compensate for this, the right side of the heart grows excessively, creating breathing difficulties.
It is defined by a rise in pulmonary artery pressure caused by abnormalities in the precapillary pulmonary arterioles due to uncontrolled hypertrophy, hyperplasia and proliferation.
Dyspnoea, syncope, palpitations.
It affects children and adults, especially women (65-80%) and usually appears in adulthood.
In around 50% of cases of pulmonary arterial hypertension the cause is unknown. The other 50% are related to:
In Spain there are 16 cases for every million adults and the incidence rate is 3.7 for every million adults per year.
Diagnosis is via a series of tests:
Although they will not cure it, there are several treatments that can significantly improve the condition, its prognosis and patients’ quality of life.
We are fortunate to have access to all the pharmaceuticals beneficial in fighting this disease:
The decision about the most suitable drugs for each patient needs to be made by centres with experience. Lastly, if these measures are insufficient, a lung transplant can be considered in some cases.
Taking anorectics, amphetamines and cocaine should be avoided. The HIV virus can also cause this condition and all factors, principally alcohol, that may lead to liver failure. Apart from these measures there are no other means of prevention and efforts should focus on early detection.
The lung transplant consists of replacing one or two sick lungs with healthy lungs. In general, transplants are carried out when there is a disease that involves severe and progressive chronic respiratory failure. Lung transplants started in 1981 in California. In Catalonia, this type of intervention is carried out exclusively at Vall d'Hebron University Hospital, for both children and adults.
Currently, 4,000 lung transplants are carried out every year around the world, including children and adults, especially in Europe, the United States, Canada and Australia. In the case of Catalonia, nine lung transplants are carried out per million inhabitants, a figure that puts us at the top of the tables. Our experience ranges from month-old babies to 70-year-olds.
Normally, it is a pneumologist with a patient with chronic respiratory insufficiency who contacts the Lung Transplant Unit for both adults and children at the Vall d'Hebron Hospital. From that first point of contact, the patient will be assessed by a multidisciplinary team in order to offer the best option, which might involve a transplant or simply medical treatment. It is important to remember that people who undergo lung transplants need to be strong enough to both wait for the operation and recover from it. This is a fundamental, complex requirement that must be met if the transplant is to provide benefits for the patient.
The survival rates for lung transplants are very positive. More than half of all patients are still alive after five years of the operation, and one in three patients after ten years. However, the goal of specialists is to continue researching to improve these results and prevent chronic rejection, and all the factors that lead to this complication.
Patients undergoing lung transplants must take an immunosuppressive therapy and prophylactics for an extended period of time. Most of these treatments are oral and in some cases may be inhaled.
In order to prevent complications, the medical advice given by your doctor should be followed precisely, avoid stress or over-exertion and make sure you follow the medication plan exactly. Aside from that, you can expect to lead a normal life.
At the Pneumology Department, we work to provide patients with respiratory diseases with the best care possible. To achieve this goal, we also carry out research and teaching activity that undoubtedly makes a large contribution to improving care quality.
Our vision and values as a Department place patients at the heart of everything we do. As healthcare professionals we are dedicated first and foremost to each of our patients. Our main motivation is continuous learning in order to improve and advance our knowledge, thus achieving excellence in our day-to-day work. The Department is made up of 18 in-house doctors, 12 resident doctors (three per year) and 9 associate doctors.
The Pneumology Teaching Unit is led by the Vall d’Hebron Pneumology Department, with participation from Internal medicine, Cardiology, Radiology, Thoracic Surgery, Intensive Care Medicine, and the Accident and Emergency Department.
Pulmonology training itinerary
Pneumology deals with the physiology and pathology of the respiratory system. Its principle purpose is the study of the aetiology, epidemiology, physiopathology, diagnosis, treatment, prevention and rehabilitation of respiratory diseases. The therapeutic and diagnostic principles of respiratory medicine are similar to those of internal medicine, although there are differences that clearly distinguish each of the specialisations. The most important difference is their reliance on and mastery of specific techniques. Diagnostic techniques include lung function analysis, respiratory or thoracic endoscopy, polysomnography and cardiorespiratory polygraphy; while mechanical rehabilitation and ventilation are used therapeutically.
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