Organizing pneumonia (OP) is a pulmonary disease histopathologically characterized by plugs of loose connective tissue in distal airways. The clinical and radiological presentations are not specific and they usually require a biopsy confirmation. This paper presents the case of a patient with a pulmonary opacity sampled with a combined technique of ultrathin bronchoscopy and cone-beam CT. A 64-year-old female, a former smoker, was admitted to the hospital of Reggio Emilia (Italy) for exertional dyspnea and a dry cough without a fever. The history of the patient included primary Sjögren Syndrome interstitial lung disease (pSS-ILD) characterized by a non-specific interstitial pneumonia (NSIP) radiological pattern; this condition was successfully treated up to 18 months before the new admission. The CT scan showed the appearance of a right lower lobe pulmonary opacity of an uncertain origin that required a histological exam for the diagnosis. The lung lesion was difficult to reach with traditional bronchoscopy and a percutaneous approach was excluded. Thus, cone-beam CT, augmented fluoroscopy and ultrathin bronchoscopy were chosen to collect a tissue sample. The histopathological exam was suggestive of OP, a condition occurring in 4–11% of primary Sjögren Syndrome cases. This case showed that, in the correct clinical and radiological context, even biopsies taken with small forceps can lead to a diagnosis of OP. Moreover, it underlined that the combination of multiple advanced technologies in the same procedure can help to reach difficult target lesions, providing proper samples for a histological diagnosis.
Diagnosis of Organizing Pneumonia with an Ultrathin Bronchoscope and Cone-Beam CT: A Case Report / Casalini, Eleonora; Piro, Roberto; Fontana, Matteo; Rossi, Laura; Ghinassi, Federica; Taddei, Sofia; Mengoli, Maria Cecilia; Magnani, Luca; Beghè, Bianca; Facciolongo, Nicola. - In: DIAGNOSTICS. - ISSN 2075-4418. - 12:11(2022), pp. 1-11. [10.3390/diagnostics12112813]
Diagnosis of Organizing Pneumonia with an Ultrathin Bronchoscope and Cone-Beam CT: A Case Report
Casalini, Eleonora;Piro, Roberto;Rossi, Laura;Ghinassi, Federica;Taddei, Sofia;Mengoli, Maria Cecilia;Beghè, Bianca;
2022
Abstract
Organizing pneumonia (OP) is a pulmonary disease histopathologically characterized by plugs of loose connective tissue in distal airways. The clinical and radiological presentations are not specific and they usually require a biopsy confirmation. This paper presents the case of a patient with a pulmonary opacity sampled with a combined technique of ultrathin bronchoscopy and cone-beam CT. A 64-year-old female, a former smoker, was admitted to the hospital of Reggio Emilia (Italy) for exertional dyspnea and a dry cough without a fever. The history of the patient included primary Sjögren Syndrome interstitial lung disease (pSS-ILD) characterized by a non-specific interstitial pneumonia (NSIP) radiological pattern; this condition was successfully treated up to 18 months before the new admission. The CT scan showed the appearance of a right lower lobe pulmonary opacity of an uncertain origin that required a histological exam for the diagnosis. The lung lesion was difficult to reach with traditional bronchoscopy and a percutaneous approach was excluded. Thus, cone-beam CT, augmented fluoroscopy and ultrathin bronchoscopy were chosen to collect a tissue sample. The histopathological exam was suggestive of OP, a condition occurring in 4–11% of primary Sjögren Syndrome cases. This case showed that, in the correct clinical and radiological context, even biopsies taken with small forceps can lead to a diagnosis of OP. Moreover, it underlined that the combination of multiple advanced technologies in the same procedure can help to reach difficult target lesions, providing proper samples for a histological diagnosis.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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