Pulmonary Histoplasmosis Identified by Video-Assisted Thoracic Surgery (VATS) Biopsy: a Case Report.
Ye Jin LeeHye-Rin KangJin Hwa SongSooim SinSang-Min LeePublished in: Journal of Korean medical science (2018)
Histoplasmosis is a common endemic mycosis in North, Central, and South America, but Korea is not known as an endemic area. We treated an immunocompetent Korean patient who had histoplasmosis. A 65-year-old Korean man presented with multiple pulmonary clumps of tiny nodules in the both lungs. He had been diagnosed 40 years earlier with pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) and a fungus ball had been diagnosed 4 years earlier. He denied any history of overseas travel. The patient visited our hospital with dyspnea, blood-tinged sputum, and weight loss, which had appeared 2 months earlier. The patient underwent video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) lung biopsy. The biopsy sample showed necrotizing granuloma and the presence of multiple small yeast-like fungi. Tissue culture confirmed Histoplasma capsulatum, and he was finally diagnosed with pulmonary histoplasmosis. Therapy was initiated with 200 mg itraconazole orally once per day. The symptoms disappeared 1 week after the start of treatment. After 4 months, low-dose chest computed tomography showed improvement in the ground glass opacity and size of the lung lesions. In conclusion, we report a case of an immunocompetent patient who developed histoplasmosis in Korea. When a patient shows unexplainable progressive infiltrative lung lesions, histoplasmosis should be considered as one of differential diagnoses although Korea is not an endemic area.
Keyphrases
- case report
- thoracic surgery
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- computed tomography
- low dose
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- pulmonary hypertension
- weight loss
- healthcare
- multiple sclerosis
- ultrasound guided
- magnetic resonance imaging
- stem cells
- type diabetes
- physical activity
- bone marrow
- magnetic resonance
- body mass index
- fine needle aspiration
- positron emission tomography
- pet ct
- adverse drug