| Literature DB >> 24891495 |
Caroline Gouder1, David Bilocca1, Peter Fsadni1, Stephen Montefort1.
Abstract
Following a provisional diagnosis of asthma of several years' duration by his general practitioner, a 43-year-old otherwise healthy man who was a non-smoker was referred to a pulmonologist with worsening productive cough and exertional breathlessness. A thoracic CT scan revealed dilated airways (tracheal diameter 35 mm, left bronchial diameter 20 mm, right bronchial diameter 18 mm). Inflamed and easily collapsible airways were seen on bronchoscopy. The patient remained stable and was followed up with regular spirometry. A follow-up CT scan 7 years later showed tracheobronchomegaly (tracheal diameter 42 mm, left bronchial diameter 25 mm, right bronchial diameter 23 mm) with large cystic spaces consistent with Mounier-Kuhn syndrome. Repeat bronchoscopy showed a massively dilated trachea and generalised collapse on expiration with a dilated thin-walled bronchial tree. He was deemed ineligible for lung transplantation due to the extent of airway involvement making it difficult to anastomose donor lung to native tissue. 2014 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24891495 PMCID: PMC4054406 DOI: 10.1136/bcr-2014-203674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Case Rep ISSN: 1757-790X