| Literature DB >> 27882146 |
Cui Zhu1, Ge Wang2, Qiong Chen1, Bixiu He1, Lijing Wang1.
Abstract
In the present study, the case of a 54-year-old male patient diagnosed with pulmonary histoplasmosis is reported, with the aim to increase the understanding of the disease characteristics and thereby facilitate the diagnosis and treatment of pulmonary histoplasmosis. Clinical manifestations, diagnosis, treatment and clinical outcomes of the present case of pulmonary histoplasmosis were described. In addition, 76 histoplasmosis patients with complete clinical data were reviewed by searching the literature for relevant studies published during 1990 and 2015. The disease was mainly manifested as cough in the present case, while imaging examination detected a lump shadow in the right lung, accompanied by exudative lesions. Initially, the patient was suspected to have bacterial pneumonia, but subsequently the diagnosis of pulmonary histoplasmosis was confirmed by lung biopsy. The symptoms were alleviated following itraconazole treatment. The patient was physically stable and had no recurrence during the subsequent follow-up period. In conclusion, pulmonary histoplasmosis is characterized by non-specific clinical and imaging manifestations, and lung tissue biopsy or respiratory pathogen culture are regarded as the diagnostic gold standards. Individualized antifungal medication should be administered based upon the patients' situation in terms of dosage and duration.Entities:
Keywords: case report; itraconazole; levofloxacin; literature review; pulmonary histoplasmosis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27882146 PMCID: PMC5103774 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2016.3774
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1.Computed tomography scans revealing bilateral pulmonary lesions 2 days before admission. (A) Pulmonary window and (B) mediastinal window.
Figure 2.Computed tomography scans revealing the changes in the lung lesions subsequent to misdiagnosis and inappropriate therapy (12 days after admission). (A) Pulmonary window and (B) mediastinal window.
Figure 3.Hematoxylin and eosin staining revealing the changes in the pulmonary lesions. (A) Magnification, ×200 and (B) magnification ×400.
Figure 4.Computed tomography scans revealing the alleviation in the lung lesions subsequent to establishing the correct diagnosis and providing treatment (4 weeks after admission). (A) Pulmonary window and (B) mediastinal window.
Figure 5.Computed tomography scans revealing the disappearance of the lung lesions following discharge. These scans were obtained in (A) September 2011, (B) November 2011, (C) February 2012 and (D) 10 days after the previous scan (February 2012).