Weekly Chest CasesArchive of Old Cases

Case No : 409 Date 2005-08-29

  • Courtesy of Sung Kyoung Moon, MD, Dong Wook Sung, MD. / Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Kyung Hee University Hospital, Seoul, Korea
  • Age/Sex 66 / M
  • Chief ComplaintCough and hemoptysis
  • Figure 1
  • Figure 2
  • Figure 3
  • Figure 4

Diagnosis With Brief Discussion

Diagnosis
Pulmonary Paragonimiasis
Radiologic Findings
Chest PA (not shown) showed slight increased interstitial lung markings on right lower lung zone. CT shows focal lobular air-space consolidation adjacent to the pleura in medial basal segment of right lower lobe. There is slight low density of central portion within the consolidation. Lung window setting shows ground glass opacities and faint centrilobular nodules on right middle and lower lobes. Slightly decreased volume of right lower lobe is seen. There are no pleural effusion and no mediastinal lymph node enlargement.

Eggs of Paragonimus westermani were found in bronchoalveolar lavage and stools. Skin test for Paragonimus westermani was positive. This patient had history of frequent ingestion of undercooked crabs.

Brief Review
Paragonimiasis is caused by the Paragonimus westermani through the ingestion of raw or partially cooked freshwater crabs or crayfish infected with the metacercaria. The main endemic areas are East Asia, Southeast Asia, Latin America, and Africa. Patients usually present with fever, chest pain, and respiratory symptoms such as chronic cough and hemoptysis. The penetration of juvenile worms through the diaphragm into the pleural cavity can cause pleural effusion or pneumothorax. Patchy air-space consolidation can occur, a phenomenon that reflects the presence of an exudative or hemorrhagic pneumonia that can be cavitated. Worm cysts, whose diameters range from 0.5 to 1.5 cm, are better visualized after the consolidation resolves and manifest as either solitary or multiple nodules or gas-filled cysts depending on their content and their communication with the airway. Sometimes clinical presentation and radiologic findings may be indistinguishable from pulmonary tuberculosis. Pulmonary infiltrates in paragonimiasis are poorly defined consolidation that changes rapidly with time, where as infiltrates in tuberculosis are nodular lesions that changes slowly. After treatment, residual fibrosis and emphysematous change are absent or minimal, whereas these findings are usual in tuberculosis. Subpleural linear opacities are unusual in tuberculosis.
References
1. Thoracic Manifestations of Tropical Parasitic Infections: A Pictorial Review. RadioGraphics. 2005 25:135-155.

2. Korean Society of Thoracic Radiology. Pulmonary Infections other than tuberculosis. In Korean Society of Thoracic Radiology. Thoracic Imaging 2000. Seoul: Seongmoonkak, 2000:123-129.
Keywords
Lung, Infection, Parasitic infection,

No. of Applicants : 27

▶ Correct Answer : 3/27,  11.1%
  • - University of Pennsylvania, USA Lisa Jones
  • - Hangang SacredHeart Hospital, Korea Eil Seong Lee
  • - Social Security Hospital, Ankara, Turkey Meric Tuzun
▶ Correct Answer as Differential Diagnosis : 6/27,  22.2%
  • - Hanyang University Hospital, Seoul, Korea Yo Won Choi
  • - Annemasse, Polyclinique de Savoie, France Gay-Depassier
  • - Annecy Hospital, France Gilles Genin
  • - Ping Tung Christian Hospital,Taiwan Jun-Jun Yeh
  • - Radiologie Guiton, La Rochelle, France Denis Chabassiere
  • - Radiologie Guiton, La Rochelle, France Jean-Luc Bigot
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