Unbound MEDLINE

[Thoracic actinomycosis versus bronchial cancer] Pneumologie (Stuttgart, Germany) [Pneumologie] Journal article

 
Title[Thoracic actinomycosis versus bronchial cancer]
Author(s)Brombacher-Frey I, Wöckel W, Kreusser T 
InstitutionPneumologische Klinik, Zentralkrankenhauses Gauting, LVA Obb.
SourcePneumologie 1992 Jan; 46(1):12-9.
MeSHActinomycosis
Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Biopsy
Carcinoma, Bronchogenic
Diagnosis, Differential
English Abstract
Female
Humans
Lung
Lung Diseases, Fungal
Lung Neoplasms
Male
Middle Aged
Thoracic Diseases
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
AbstractWe report on 4 thoracic actinomycoses; in three of these four cases a bronchial carcinoma was suspected, and in case No. 2 this carcinoma had been considered to be in a very advanced and inoperable stage. A man of 51 years of age was in a generally run-down condition. He also noticed that his sputum was tinged with blood. The x-ray film showed a large space-occupying growth at the right lung hilus. Repeated perbronchial biopsies of the focus did not yield any diagnosis. Actinomycosis was identified histologically only in the tissue samples obtained via thoracotomy. After a three-month penicillin course the hilar shadow receded. A 61-year old male patient was transferred to our Pneumological Hospital, being strongly suspected of suffering from an extensive bronchial carcinoma, and having multiple intrathoracic space-occupying growths as well as pleural effusions, a pericardial effusion, and an infiltration of the left thoracic wall with fistula formation; however, histological examination of skin biopsies revealed that he was suffering from actinomycosis. Antibiotic therapy cured him completely in a six-month course. In a man of 32 years of age who had been indulging for many years in a severe abuse of nicotin, we suspected a central bronchial carcinoma on the basis of his x-ray, but histology of the tissue taken from the space-occupying growth via diagnostic thoracotomy revealed that this patient, too, suffered from actinomycosis. Complete recession occurred after several months of antibiotic treatment. A woman of 82 years had been an inpatient for several months in another hospital because of relapsing pleuropneumonias on the right side. She was transferred to us as an outpatient after a renewed relapse. We conducted a transcutaneous fine-needle biopsy of the right indurating pleural effusion. A few actinomyces filaments were seen on histological examination of the purulent exudate. Hence, actinomycosis was confirmed. After antibiotic therapy the finding receded completely.
Languageger
Pub Type(s)Case Reports
Journal Article
PubMed ID1546057
  
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