| Literature DB >> 28197882 |
Diego Varona Porres1, Oscar Persiva2, Esther Pallisa2, Jordi Andreu2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this report is to identify the radiological findings of unilateral tuberculous lung destruction (UTLD).Entities:
Keywords: CT scanner, X-ray; Infections, respiratory; Radiography; Thoracic; Tuberculosis, pulmonary
Year: 2017 PMID: 28197882 PMCID: PMC5359149 DOI: 10.1007/s13244-017-0547-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insights Imaging ISSN: 1869-4101
Demographic and clinical data of the study patients
| Sex/age | Country of origin | Medical history | TB treatment | Symptoms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Female/43 years | Guinea | TB at 24 years | Complete treatment with 4 drugs for 24 months | Fever |
| 2 | Male/27 years | Ecuador | TB at 20 years | Not recorded in medical history | Cough with mucus expectoration and left pleuritic pain |
| 3 | Male/83 years | Spain | TB in infancy | Not recorded in medical history | Weakness and paresthesia of the hands |
| 4 | Female/38 years | Spain | TB at 28 years | Complete pharmacological treatment for 6 months | Sudden dyspnoea due to right tension pneumothorax |
| 5 | Female/69 years | Spain | TB at 12 years, reactivation at 55 years | Collapse therapy and intramuscular streptomycin during adolescence. Reactivation 14 years ago treated for 6 months with drugs not specified in medical history | Haemoptysis |
| 6 | Female/68 years | Spain | TB at 29 years | Complete pharmacological treatment during patient’s second pregnancy | No symptoms |
| 7 | Male/73 years | Spain | TB in youth | Collapse therapy | Fever and purulent expectoration |
| 8 | Male/72 years | Spain | TB at 18 years, reactivation at 55 years | Pharmacological treatment for 12 months at 18 years. Reactivation treated with 3 drugs for 18 months | Dyspnoea, cough and purulent expectoration |
| 9 | Male/81 years | Spain | TB at 25 years | Not recorded in medical history | Dyspnoea, cough, purulent expectoration, chest pain and fever |
| 10 | Male/73 years | Spain | TB at 16 years | Therapeutic pneumothorax | Evaluation for noninvasive mechanical ventilation |
| 11 | Male/58 years | Spain | TB at 30 years | Complete pharmacological treatment with 3 drugs for 9 months | Dyspnoea |
| 12 | Male/66 years | Spain | TB in infancy | Not recorded in medical history | Dyspnoea and expectoration |
| 13 | Female/76 years | Spain | TB at 28 years | Not recorded in medical history | Non-productive cough |
TB, tuberculosis; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus
Fig. 1A 58-year-old male with a history of pulmonary TB 20 years previously presented with dyspnoea on exertion. (a) The chest radiograph shows marked loss of left lung volume, with an isolated hyperlucent lesion (arrows) that reflects herniation of the contralateral lung toward the left hemithorax. (b) Unenhanced multislice CT depicts total destruction of the left lung with residual cystic bronchiectasis (arrows) and herniation of the right lung toward the left hemithorax. (c) Unenhanced multislice CT clearly demonstrates herniation of the right lung toward the left hemithorax, that is, anterior herniation of the upper lobe and posterior herniation of the lower lobe (arrows)
Fig. 2A 68-year-old female with a background of pulmonary TB at age 29 was seen at our hospital for a breast cancer follow-up study. (a) Chest radiography shows marked loss of left lung volume and herniation of the contralateral lung (arrows). (b) Contrast-enhanced multislice CT demonstrates total left lung destruction with no residual cystic bronchiectasis. Calcifications are seen in the remnant lung (arrows), and the contralateral lung is herniated
Fig. 3An 83-year-old male who had pulmonary TB in infancy came to our hospital for weakness and paresthesia of both hands. (a) On contrast-enhanced multislice CT, total left lung destruction with calcifications (black arrow) in the remnant lung, occupation of the left main bronchus (white arrow) and decreased diameter of the left main pulmonary artery (asterisk) are visualised. (b) The diameter of the ipsilateral superior and inferior pulmonary veins is also decreased (arrows)
Fig. 4A 76-year-old female with TB history in infancy presenting with dry cough for 1 month. Non-enhanced CT shows total unilateral left lung destruction with bronchiectasis. Upper ipsilateral ribs are hypertrophic (black arrow) and extrapleural fat proliferation is also evident (asterisk)
Fig. 5A 73-year-old male with a history of pulmonary TB as a youth and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease was seen for fever and purulent expectoration. Unenhanced multislice CT depicted complete left pulmonary destruction with residual cystic bronchiectasis associated with air-fluid levels (white arrow in the right image) and airway occupation with mucus impaction in the lower right lobe (black arrows in the left image). Sputum culture was positive for Pseudomona aeruginosa and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Antibiotic treatment was established without success, and the patient died 15 days after hospitalisation
Fig. 6A 43-year-old female with TB history in her youth and recurrent infections presenting with fever. Sputum culture was postive for Pseudomona aeruginosa. (a) Non-enhanced CT shows total unilateral left lung destruction with bronchiectasias (asterisk) and lung atelectasis with saccular bronchiectasis in the right upper lobe (white arrow). (b) Right middle lobe atelectasis is also seen along with bronchiectasis (white arrow)
Fig. 7Same patient as in Fig. 4. (a) Chest radiograph shows total unilateral left lung destruction and calcification projected on the upper half of left hemithorax. (b) Non-enhanced CT confirms the presence of left upper pleural calcification in correspondence with the calcification seen on chest radiograph