| Literature DB >> 20691116 |
Shoaib Faruqi1, Ged Avery, Alyn H Morice.
Abstract
A 62-year-old man presented with chronic dry cough. He was known to have Crohn's disease which was in remission. A plain chest radiograph demonstrated bilateral apical infiltrates. A HRCT of the chest showed normal proximal airways. Stenosis of medium size airways was present with post-stenotic dilation. These dilated peripheral bronchi appeared fluid filled. Patchy areas of consolidation were seen as well. These changes were thought to be due to Crohn's disease involving the lungs and responded well to treatment with cortico-steroids. We report this uncommon radiological association with Crohn's disease.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20691116 PMCID: PMC2924257 DOI: 10.1186/1745-9974-6-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cough ISSN: 1745-9974
Figure 1A plain chest radiograph demonstrating infiltrates in both the apices.
Figure 2A reformatted coronal CT image demonstrating dilated fluid filled bronchi in the panel on left. The bronchi can be followed centrally. They narrow down and then appear normal. This is well seen in the left upper lobe (arrows). Areas of patchy consolidation are seen bilaterally. A small left pneumothorax is seen which was a complication of the trans-bronchial biopsy. Panel on the right shows a reformatted coronal CT image at the same level six weeks later. The dilated bronchi seen on the earlier scan have markedly improved. This is clearly demonstrated in the left upper lobe (arrows). The areas of consolidation have improved as well. The pneumothorax has now resolved without need for drainage.
Figure 3CT image at the same level before and following treatment at six weeks. Arrows annotate the fluid filled dilated bronchi which demonstrate improvement following treatment.