| Literature DB >> 29788999 |
Taizou Hirano1,2, Tadahisa Numakura3,4, Hiroshi Moriyama5, Ryoko Saito6, Yutaka Shishikura1,2, Jun Shiihara2,7, Hisatoshi Sugiura1, Masakazu Ichinose1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Occupational lung diseases, such as pneumoconiosis, are one of the health problems of dental workers that have been receiving increasing interest. Pulmonary amyloidosis is a heterogenous group of diseases, and can be classified into primary (idiopathic) and secondary (associated with various inflammatory diseases, hereditary, or neoplastic). To date, the development of pulmonary amyloidosis in dental workers has not been reported. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Amyloid deposition; Dental technician; Pulmonary granulomas; Silica
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29788999 PMCID: PMC5964708 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-018-0654-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Results of laboratory examinations on admission
| Blood count | |
| WBC | 5800/μl |
| Neut | 56.7% |
| Eos | 3.6% |
| Bas | 1.0% |
| Mo | 4.9% |
| Ly | 33.8% |
| RBC | 430 × 104/μl |
| Hb | 13.0 g/dl |
| Plt | 28.4 × 104/μl |
| Arterial blood gas (room air) | |
| pH | 7.427 |
| PaO2 | 94.5 Torr |
| PaCO2 | 36.8 Torr |
| HCO3- | 23.7 mEq/l |
| BE | −0.3 mEq/l |
| Blood chemistry | |
| TP | 8.2 g/dl |
| Alb | 5.0 g/dl |
| T-bil | 0.3 mg/dl |
| AST | 16 IU/l |
| ALT | 16 IU/l |
| LDH | 178 IU/l |
| ALP | 242 IU/l |
| γGTP | 16 IU/l |
| BUN | 17.8 mg/dl |
| Cre | 0.6 mg/dl |
| Na | 143 mEq/l |
| K | 4.0 mEq/l |
| Cl | 108 mEq/l |
| Ca | 9.9 mg/dl |
| Serum | |
| CRP | 0.02 mg/dl |
| IgG | 1952 mg/dl |
| IgA | 309 mg/dl |
| IgM | 95 mg/dl |
| IgG4 | 25 mg/dl |
| CEA | 1.96 ng/ml |
| CA19-9 | 2.0 U/ml |
| ANA | x 40 |
| Anti CCP antibody | < 0.6 U/ml |
| anti SS-Aantibody | negative |
| Anti SS-B antibody | negative |
| Serum amyloid A | 2.9 μg/ml |
| s-IL-2R | 412 IU/ml |
| β-D glucan | < 5.0 pg/ml |
| | negative |
| | negative |
| | negative |
| T-SPOT | negative |
| Serum protein electrophoresis | |
| M protein | negative |
| Urine protein electrophoresis | |
| Bence-Jones protein | negative |
Neut neutrophil, UA uric acid, CRP C-reactive protein, CEA carcinoembryonic antigen, CA19-9 carbohydrate antigen 19-9, CCP cyclic citrullinated peptide, s-IL-2R soluble interluekin 2 receptor
Fig. 1a, b Chest X ray (a) and chest computed tomography on admission (b) revealed multiple well-defined nodules in both lungs. c Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-positron emission tomography revealed abnormal FDG uptake in the same lesions with a maximal standardized uptake value (SUV [max]) of 5.6
Fig. 2Histopathological findings of the lung nodules. a Macroscopic examination of a white hard nodule in the right middle lobe. b Low-magnification image of a hematoxylin and eosin (HE) stained specimen revealed granuloma formation with foreign body-type giant cells (arrow) and mild and focal chronic inflammatory changes with eosin-positive deposits (asterisk). c and d The images of direct fast scarlet (DFS) staining revealed that the deposits were DFS positive (asterisk) (c, at lower-magnification, and d, at higher-magnification). e The DFS staining-positive lesions produced an apple-green birefringence under crossed polarized light (arrows) (× 100). The collagen fibrils appeared white (arrow heads). f The deposits were Congo red positive (asterisk). Foreign body-type giant cells were detected (arrows) (× 100). g and h A representative photograph of HE stained specimen (g) and its image of electron probe X-ray microanalysis (EPMA) (h). A two-dimension EPMA-wavelength dispersive spectrometer (WDS) image of an elemental map corresponding to the area shown in (h), showing orange dots indicating silica (Si) accumulated in giant cells (arrows). The distribution of amino nitrogen was colored green (h)