| Literature DB >> 35979382 |
Maryam Albaji1, Mohammad Reza Fattahi2,3, Arad Iranmehr4.
Abstract
A young man, a recent coronavirus patient, was readmitted with hypoesthesia and dysarthria following a rapid deterioration of respiratory symptoms. The brain and lung CT scans revealed ischemia and cavitary lung lesions. Clinical suspicion for aspergillus leads to prompt treatment, confirmed by biopsy. Neurologic and pulmonary symptoms resolved ultimately.Entities:
Keywords: CAPA; cavitary; neurologic; superinfection
Year: 2022 PMID: 35979382 PMCID: PMC9366931 DOI: 10.1002/ccr3.6188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Case Rep ISSN: 2050-0904
FIGURE 1Brain MRI revealed abnormal signal intensity in the left frontal region in T2/FLAIR, which shows restriction in DWI image in favor of acute infarction in left MCA territory
Laboratory findings of the patient
| Laboratory test | Result | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| WBC count | 13,200/HPF | 4000–11,000/HPF |
| CRP | 8.2 mg/L | 0–10 |
| ESR | 36 mm/h | up to 18 |
| LDH | 509 U/L | Up to 480 U/L |
| D‐Dimer | 292 ng/ml | Up to 500 ng/ml |
| Troponin I. Quantitative | 139.2 ng/ml | Up to 26 ng/ml |
| COVID‐19/PCR Qualitative | Not detected | Negative |
FIGURE 2Chest CT scan in the ER on the second day of the presentation
FIGURE 3Chest CT scan after complete treatment