| Literature DB >> 29805340 |
Ji Soo Park1, Yun Jung Choi1, Young Tae Kim2, Samina Park2, Jong-Hee Chae1, June Dong Park1, Yeon Jin Cho3, Woo-Sun Kim3, Moon-Woo Seong4, Sung-Hye Park5, Dohee Kwon5, Doo Hyun Chung5, Dong In Suh1.
Abstract
Mutations of the surfactant protein (SP)-C gene (SFTPC) have been associated with neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) and childhood interstitial lung disease (ILD). If accurate diagnosis and proper management are delayed, irreversible respiratory failure demanding lung transplantation may ensue. A girl was born at term but was intubated and given exogenous surfactant due to RDS. Cough and tachypnea persisted, and symptoms rapidly progressed at 16 months of age despite treatment with antibiotics, oral prednisolone, methylprednisolone pulse therapy, and intravenous immunoglobulin. At 20 months, she visited our hospital for a second opinion. A computed tomography scan showed a diffuse mosaic pattern with ground-glass opacity and subpleural cysts compatible with ILD. A video-assisted thoracoscopic lung biopsy revealed ILD with eosinophilic proteinaceous material and macrophages in the alveolar space. Bilateral lung transplant from a 30-month-old child was done, and she was discharged in room air without acute complications. Genetic analysis revealed a novel c.203T>A, p.Val68Asp mutation of SP-C, based on the same exon as a known pathogenic mutation, p.Glu66Lys.Entities:
Keywords: Interstitial Lung Disease; Lung Transplantation; SFTPC; Surfactant Protein C
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29805340 PMCID: PMC5966374 DOI: 10.3346/jkms.2018.33.e159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Korean Med Sci ISSN: 1011-8934 Impact factor: 2.153
Fig. 1Sequential chest radiographs and CT. (A) Chest radiograph on the second postnatal day reveals a pneumomediastinum during the treatment with mechanical ventilation. (B) Coronal reconstructed chest CT on postnatal day 18 shows a resolved pneumomediastinum. However, there is residual diffuse GGO in both lungs with the right lung predominance. (C) Chest radiograph at 20 months of age demonstrates recurrence of diffuse haziness in bilateral lungs. (D) Axial chest CT image at 20 months of age shows diffuse GGO with mosaic attenuation and multiple tiny subpleural air cysts (arrows) in both lungs.
CT = computed tomography, GGO = ground-glass opacity.
Fig. 2Histological (hematoxylin and eosin stain) and ultrastructural findings of the lung. (A) Uniformly diffuse interstitial fibrosis and inflammatory cell infiltration are observed (× 40, scale bar = 1 mm). (B) Eosinophilic proteinaceous material and alveolar macrophages are identified in alveolar spaces (× 200, scale bar = 200 μm). (C, D) Ultrastructurally, the alveoli are lined by type II pneumocytes, which have a relatively normal appearing lamellar form of surfactant in shape and number.