ABSTRACT
Cryptococcosis, primarily an opportunistic infection, often occurs in immunocompromised patients but can also affect immunocompetent individuals. Cryptococcosis typically manifests in the lungs, but pleurisy is rare, particularly in immunocompetent patients. This report details a case of cryptococcal pleuritis in a 74-year-old immunocompetent male with a history of heart failure, presenting initially with pleural effusion. Diagnostic challenges arose due to the initial absence of intrapulmonary lesions. The diagnosis was eventually established through a surgical biopsy and tissue culture, revealing Cryptococcus neoformans. This case underscores the complexity of diagnosing cryptococcal infections, particularly in immunocompetent patients, and highlights the need for considering cryptococcosis in differential diagnoses of lymphocyte-predominant exudative pleural effusions.