Clinicopathologic study of Churg-Strauss syndrome.
- Author:
Rui-e FENG
1
;
Hong-rui LIU
;
Zhi-yong LIANG
;
Ju-hong SHI
;
Yuan-jue ZHU
;
Dong-ge MU
;
Hui-xing KE
;
Ji-yao YU
Author Information
- Publication Type:Case Reports
- MeSH: Aged; Churg-Strauss Syndrome; pathology; Eosinophilia; pathology; Female; Granuloma; pathology; Humans; Lung Diseases; pathology; Male; Middle Aged; Pulmonary Eosinophilia; pathology; Vasculitis; pathology
- From: Chinese Journal of Pathology 2008;37(2):114-117
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo study the clinical and pathologic features of Churg-Strauss syndrome (CCS).
METHODSThree cases of Churg-Strauss syndrome, including 1 autopsy case and 2 cases with open thoracoscopic lung biopsy, were retrospectively reviewed. All the tissue samples were formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded and stained with hematoxylin and eosin.
RESULTSThe first patient was a 68-year-old man who had history of asthma for 4 years, with recent exacerbation and chest pain for 2 weeks. Patient died 1 day after admission due to myocarditis and myocardial infarction. He did not have peripheral eosinophilia, skin or paranasal sinus pathology. CSS represented an incidental autopsy finding and he had never been treated with corticosteroid before. The other 2 patients were a 58-year-old male and a 12-year-old female, respectively. Both had history of asthma, peripheral eosinophilia and lung consolidations on computed tomographic examination. Pathologically, all cases showed vasculitis, perivascular allergic-type granulomas, eosinophilic pneumonia and asthmatic bronchitis.
CONCLUSIONSThorough understanding of the clinical and pathologic criteria is essential for arriving at a correct diagnosis of CSS. Although some patients may present with atypical symptoms, lung biopsies often reveal the classic histologic findings which include vasculitis and perivascular allergic granuloma formation.