1.An Unusual Radiologic Pattern of Cryptogenic Organizing Pneumonia: Diffuse Pulmonary Nodules in a Leukemia Patient.
Kai Hsiung KO ; Hsian He HSU ; Woei Yau KAO ; Ching Feng CHANG ; Ming Fang CHENG ; Guo Shu HUANG
Korean Journal of Radiology 2009;10(1):93-96
The radiological appearance of diffuse discrete pulmonary nodules associated with cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (COP) has been rarely described. We describe a case of COP in 49-year-old woman with acute myeloid leukemia who developed diffuse pulmonary nodules during the second course of induction chemotherapy. The clinical status of the patient and imaging findings suggested the presence of a pulmonary metastasis or infectious disease. A video-assisted thoracoscopic lung biopsy resulted in the unexpected diagnosis of COP as an isolated entity. Steroid therapy led to dramatic improvement of the clinical symptoms and the pulmonary lesions.
Cryptogenic Organizing Pneumonia/complications/*radiography
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Female
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Humans
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Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute/*complications/pathology
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Lung/*radiography
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Lung Neoplasms/radiography/secondary
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Middle Aged
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Multiple Pulmonary Nodules/complications/*radiography
2.Follow-up Aspects of Influenza A (H1N1) Virus-Associated Pneumonia: the Role of High-Resolution Computed Tomography in the Evaluation of the Recovery Phase.
Edson MARCHIORI ; Glaucia ZANETTI ; Claudia Mauro MANO ; Bruno HOCHHEGGER ; Klaus Loureiro IRION
Korean Journal of Radiology 2010;11(5):587-587
3.Mycotic Pulmonary Artery Aneurysm as an Unusual Complication of Thoracic Actinomycosis.
Hyung Soo KIM ; Yu Whan OH ; Hyung Jun NOH ; Ki Yeol LEE ; Eun Young KANG ; Sang Yeub LEE
Korean Journal of Radiology 2004;5(1):68-71
Although pulmonary artery aneurysms are a rare vascular anomaly, they are seen in a wide variety of conditions, such as congenital heart disease, infection, trauma, pulmonary hypertension, cystic medial necrosis and generalized vasculitis. To our knowledge, mycotic aneurysms caused by pulmonary actinomycosis have not been reported in the radiologic literature. Herein, a case of pulmonary actinomycosis complicated by mycotic aneurysm is presented. On CT scans, this case showed focal aneurysmal dilatation of a peripheral pulmonary artery within necrotizing pneumonia of the right lower lobe, which was successfully treated with transcatheter embolization using wire coils.
Actinomycosis/*complications
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Aged
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Aneurysm, Infected/*etiology/*radiography/therapy
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Embolization, Therapeutic
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Human
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Male
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Pneumonia, Bacterial/*complications
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*Pulmonary Artery
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Treatment Outcome
4.Atypical Radiological Manifestation of Pulmonary Metastatic Calcification.
Eun Hae KANG ; Eun Sun KIM ; Chul Hwan KIM ; Soo Youn HAM ; Yu Whan OH
Korean Journal of Radiology 2008;9(2):186-189
Metastatic pulmonary calcification refers to calcium deposition in the normal pulmonary parenchyma and this deposition is secondary to abnormal calcium metabolism. The most common radiologic manifestation consists of poorly-defined nodular opacities that are mainly seen in the upper lung zone. We present here a case of metastatic pulmonary calcification that manifested as atypical, dense, calcium deposition in airspaces within the previously existing consolidation in the bilateral lower lobes, and this process was accelerated by pneumonia-complicated sepsis in a patient with hypercalcemia that was due to hyperparathyroidism.
Calcinosis/*radiography
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Female
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Humans
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Hypercalcemia/etiology
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Hyperparathyroidism/complications/surgery
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Lung Diseases/*radiography
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Middle Aged
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Parathyroidectomy
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Pneumonia/complications
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Shock, Septic/microbiology
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods
5.Colobronchial Fistula as a Late Complication of Esophagocologastrostomy.
Chul Burm LEE ; Sung Ho HAN ; Shee Young HAHM ; Heng Ok JEE ; Hyuk KIM ; Won Sang JUNG ; Young Hak KIM ; Jung Ho KANG
The Korean Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2002;35(1):77-81
We report a case of colobronchial fistula, which is an extremely rare complication of esophagocologastrostomy. A 53-year-old man developed recurrent respiratory symptoms 30 months after colon interposition for corrosive esophageal and gastric strictures. Chest radiographs and computed tomography showed an aspiration pneumonia and total atelectasis of the left lower lobe(LLL). Esophagoscopy and barium esophagogram revealed fistula between the colon just below the esophagocolostomy and superior segment of the LLL. The colobronchial fistulectomy and left lower lobe lobectomy were performed. This rare complication should be considered in patients who develop recurrent productive cough whenever they drink or eat something after esophagocologastrostomy.
Barium
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Colon
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Constriction, Pathologic
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Cough
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Esophagoscopy
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Fistula*
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Humans
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Middle Aged
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Pneumonia, Aspiration
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Postoperative Complications
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Pulmonary Atelectasis
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Radiography, Thoracic
6.Colobronchial Fistula as a Late Complication of Esophagocologastrostomy.
Chul Burm LEE ; Sung Ho HAN ; Shee Young HAHM ; Heng Ok JEE ; Hyuk KIM ; Won Sang JUNG ; Young Hak KIM ; Jung Ho KANG
The Korean Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2002;35(1):77-81
We report a case of colobronchial fistula, which is an extremely rare complication of esophagocologastrostomy. A 53-year-old man developed recurrent respiratory symptoms 30 months after colon interposition for corrosive esophageal and gastric strictures. Chest radiographs and computed tomography showed an aspiration pneumonia and total atelectasis of the left lower lobe(LLL). Esophagoscopy and barium esophagogram revealed fistula between the colon just below the esophagocolostomy and superior segment of the LLL. The colobronchial fistulectomy and left lower lobe lobectomy were performed. This rare complication should be considered in patients who develop recurrent productive cough whenever they drink or eat something after esophagocologastrostomy.
Barium
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Colon
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Constriction, Pathologic
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Cough
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Esophagoscopy
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Fistula*
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Humans
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Middle Aged
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Pneumonia, Aspiration
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Postoperative Complications
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Pulmonary Atelectasis
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Radiography, Thoracic
8.Pulmonary Complication of Novel Influenza A (H1N1) Infection: Imaging Features in Two Patients.
Choong Wook LEE ; Joon Beom SEO ; Jae Woo SONG ; Hyun Joo LEE ; Jin Seong LEE ; Mi Young KIM ; Eun Jin CHAE ; Jin Woo SONG ; Won Young KIM
Korean Journal of Radiology 2009;10(6):531-534
Novel influenza A (H1N1) virus is the pathogen of recent global outbreaks of febrile respiratory infection. We herein report the imaging findings of pulmonary complication in two patients with novel influenza A (H1N1) infection. The first patient without secondary infection showed the ill-defined ground-glass opacity nodules and patch areas of ground-glass opacities. The second patient with secondary pneumococcal pneumonia showed areas of lobar consolidation in the right middle lobe and left lower lobe and ground-glass opacities.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Female
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Humans
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*Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype
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Influenza, Human/complications/drug therapy/*radiography/virology
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Lung/*radiography/virology
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Pneumonia, Pneumococcal/drug therapy/*radiography
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Radiography, Thoracic
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Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
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*Tomography, X-Ray Computed
9.Clinicopathologic analysis of organizing pneumonia in elderly autopsies.
Fang FANG ; Feng-Ru LIN ; Hui-Zhang LI
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2004;33(2):113-116
OBJECTIVETo study the clinicopathologic characteristics of organizing pneumonia of the autopsies in elder and to analyze the possible underlying etiologic factors.
METHODSNinety-five cases of organizing pneumonia were found from 635 elderly autopsy reports of the Beijing Hospital since 1980. The morphologic and imaginal features were analyzed.
RESULTSThe foci of organizing pneumonia in our series were often small, patchy, scattered and adjacent to other lung lesion. There were, however, some variations in cases with different underlying conditions. The conditions associated with organizing pneumonia, as detected in our series, were: (1) 36 cases with suppurative inflammation, lung abscesses and chronic relapsing pneumonia; (2) 17 cases with fungal or viral infection; (3) 16 cases with aspiration pneumonia; (4) 5 cases with radiation pneumonia. We observed that it was not uncommon for organizing pneumonia coexisting with atelectasis and chronic pleuritis. The image of organizing pneumonia was varied.
CONCLUSIONSOrganizing pneumonia is a common finding in autopsies of the elder. It occurs in association with many diseases and the basic pathologic changes are similar. All of which represent secondary phenomenon. Possible etiologic factors include infection (due to bacteria, fungi or virus), aspiration and radiation. The possibility of organizing pneumonia should be considered if the shadow of lung is undisappeared in imagin.
Aged ; Cryptogenic Organizing Pneumonia ; etiology ; pathology ; Humans ; Lung ; diagnostic imaging ; pathology ; Lung Abscess ; complications ; pathology ; Lung Diseases, Fungal ; complications ; pathology ; Middle Aged ; Pneumonia, Aspiration ; complications ; pathology ; Radiography ; Retrospective Studies
10.Rothia mucilaginosa Pneumonia Diagnosed by Quantitative Cultures and Intracellular Organisms of Bronchoalveolar Lavage in a Lymphoma Patient.
Eun Jung CHO ; Heungsup SUNG ; Sook Ja PARK ; Mi Na KIM ; Sang Oh LEE
Annals of Laboratory Medicine 2013;33(2):145-149
Rothia mucilaginosa is a gram-positive coccus of the family Micrococcaceae. R. mucilaginosa is considered a part of the normal flora of the human oropharynx and upper respiratory tract and lower respiratory tract infections attributable to R. mucilaginosa are not frequent. We present a case of pneumonia, in which the R. mucilaginosa infection was diagnosed by quantitative cultures of a bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) specimen. A 46-yr-old woman with B lymphoblastic lymphoma was admitted to the hospital for scheduled chemotherapy. Her chest computed tomography (CT) scan revealed bilateral multifocal nodular and patchy consolidation in both lungs. Investigation of the BAL specimen revealed that 7% of leukocytes had intracellular gram-positive cocci. The quantitative cultures of the BAL specimen grew mucoid, non-hemolytic, and grayish convex colonies on blood agar at a count of approximately 200,000 colony-forming units/mL. The colonies were identified as R. mucilaginosa. The patient was empirically treated with levofloxacin for 7 days, after which findings on the chest radiograph and CT scan improved. She was discharged with improvement on hospital day 46. To our knowledge, this is the first report of R. mucilaginosa pneumonia diagnosed in Korea. Quantitative culture of BAL specimen and examination of intracellular organisms are crucial for assessing the clinical significance of R. mucilaginosa recovered from the lower respiratory tract.
Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid/*microbiology
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Female
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Humans
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Lung/radiography
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Lymphoma/complications/*diagnosis
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Micrococcaceae/*isolation & purification
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Middle Aged
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Pneumonia/complications/*diagnosis/microbiology
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed