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1.
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases ; : 394-399, 1995.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-179908

ABSTRACT

Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia(PCP) remains the leading cause of death in patients with AIDS. Although the most common radiographic presentation of PCP is the developme-nt of diffuse, bilateral interstitial or alveolar infiltrates in 48 to 86 per cent of AIDS patients, PCP may also present with either a completely normal or only minimally abnormal chest radiograph in 6 to 23 per cent of patients. We experienced two patients with AIDS presenting high fever and chest pain but normal chest radiograph, who had been proved to have PCP by bronchoalveolar lavage and trans-bronchial lung biopsy.


Subject(s)
Humans , Biopsy , Bronchoalveolar Lavage , Bronchoscopy , Cause of Death , Chest Pain , Fever , Lung , Pneumocystis carinii , Pneumonia , Radiography, Thoracic , Thorax
2.
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases ; : 618-623, 1995.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-224828

ABSTRACT

Cryptococcosis is a systemic mycosis that most often involves the lungs and central nervous system and, less frequently, the skin, skeletal system, and prostate gland. Cryptococcus neoformans, the causative organism, is a yeastlike round or oval fungus, 4 to 6microm in diameter, which is surrounded by a polysaccharide capsule and reproduces by budding and found in soil and other enviromental areas, especially those contaminated by pigeon droppings. Humans and aninmals acquire infection after inhalation of aerosolized spores. Condition or factors that predispose to cryptococcosis include corticosteroid therapy, lymphoreticular malignancies, HIV infection, and sarcoidosis etc. We discribed a case of cryptococcosis involving lung and CNS coincidently without specific underlying disease and the literature on subject were reviewed. A fifty-six year-old previously healthy female presented with headache of 3 months of duration. She had no history suggesting immunologic suppression and we could not find any abnormal laboratory findings including blood sugar, serum immunoglobulin and complement level, HIV antibody, and T cell subsets. Chest roentgenogram and CT scan showed a solitary soft tissue mass in LUL with distal pneumonitis. Brain MRI showed granulomatous lesion in cerebellum and parasagittal cortex of right frontal lobe. The diagnosis was made by bronchoscopic brushing cytology, transthoracic fine needle aspiration, and sputum OH mount and culture. She was treated 6 weeks course of Amphotericin B and switched to oral fluconazole therapy for 3 months. Her symptoms and X-ray findings were improved gradually and she is now under regular clinical follow up.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Amphotericin B , Biopsy, Fine-Needle , Blood Glucose , Brain , Central Nervous System , Cerebellum , Columbidae , Complement System Proteins , Cryptococcosis , Cryptococcus neoformans , Diagnosis , Fluconazole , Follow-Up Studies , Frontal Lobe , Fungi , Headache , HIV , HIV Infections , Immunoglobulins , Inhalation , Lung , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Pneumonia , Prostate , Sarcoidosis , Skin , Soil , Spores , Sputum , T-Lymphocyte Subsets , Thorax , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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