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Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia: a case report and review of the literature

INTRODUCTION: Organising pneumonia is a distinct histopathological entity characterized by intra-alveolar buds of granulation tissue, called Masson bodies, which mainly comprise of activated fibroblasts and loose connective tissue. This histopathologic pattern has been described in idiopathic cases,...

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Autores principales: Tzouvelekis, Argyris, Koutsopoulos, Anastasios, Oikonomou, Anastasia, Froudarakis, Marios, Zarogoulidis, Pavlos, Steiropoulos, Paschalis, Mikroulis, Dimitrios, Antoniades, Antonis, Bouros, Demosthenes
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2783073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19946550
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-3-74
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author Tzouvelekis, Argyris
Koutsopoulos, Anastasios
Oikonomou, Anastasia
Froudarakis, Marios
Zarogoulidis, Pavlos
Steiropoulos, Paschalis
Mikroulis, Dimitrios
Antoniades, Antonis
Bouros, Demosthenes
author_facet Tzouvelekis, Argyris
Koutsopoulos, Anastasios
Oikonomou, Anastasia
Froudarakis, Marios
Zarogoulidis, Pavlos
Steiropoulos, Paschalis
Mikroulis, Dimitrios
Antoniades, Antonis
Bouros, Demosthenes
author_sort Tzouvelekis, Argyris
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Organising pneumonia is a distinct histopathological entity characterized by intra-alveolar buds of granulation tissue, called Masson bodies, which mainly comprise of activated fibroblasts and loose connective tissue. This histopathologic pattern has been described in idiopathic cases, characterizing cryptogenic organising pneumonia as well as in the context of pulmonary infection, drug-induced pneumonitis and following lung transplantation. Although distinct as a clinical and pathological entity, community organising pneumonia may present with atypical clinical and pathological features, such as intra-alveolar fillings of fibrin balls and organising tissue that resembles acute respiratory distress syndrome or diffuse alveolar damage. The latter characteristics constitute a recently described anatomoclinical entity called acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia. CASE PRESENTATION: Here, we describe a rare case of acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia, in an otherwise healthy 65-year-old Greek woman who complained of dry cough, fever, weight loss and progressive dyspnoea. She had never been a smoker. Her clinical symptoms showed a rapid deterioration in the two weeks before admission, despite a course of oral antibiotics. After excluding infection and malignancy with routine laboratory tests and flexible bronchoscopy, high resolution computed tomography and video assisted thoracoscopic lung biopsy were performed. Diagnosis was based on radiological features typical of community organising pneumonia coupled with pathologic features characteristic of acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia. The patient was treated with corticosteroids and showed excellent clinical and radiological response three months after treatment initiation. CONCLUSION: Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia is an extremely rare pathologic entity, often misdiagnosed as typical community organising pneumonia. To our knowledge, this is the seventh case of acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia in the literature, with no identifiable cause or association in a female patient, with no underlying lung disease or known exposures and with an unremarkable previous medical history. We highlight the need for careful review of lung biopsies from patients with clinical and radiologic characteristics typical of community organising pneumonia. Although it remains uncertain whether fibrin alters the favourable prognosis and treatment response of community organising pneumonia, it becomes obvious that a thorough pathologic review, apart from establishing the diagnosis of acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia, may predict a more unfavorable outcome therefore alerting the clinician to administer more aggressive and prolonged therapeutic regimens.
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spelling pubmed-27830732009-11-26 Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia: a case report and review of the literature Tzouvelekis, Argyris Koutsopoulos, Anastasios Oikonomou, Anastasia Froudarakis, Marios Zarogoulidis, Pavlos Steiropoulos, Paschalis Mikroulis, Dimitrios Antoniades, Antonis Bouros, Demosthenes J Med Case Reports Case report INTRODUCTION: Organising pneumonia is a distinct histopathological entity characterized by intra-alveolar buds of granulation tissue, called Masson bodies, which mainly comprise of activated fibroblasts and loose connective tissue. This histopathologic pattern has been described in idiopathic cases, characterizing cryptogenic organising pneumonia as well as in the context of pulmonary infection, drug-induced pneumonitis and following lung transplantation. Although distinct as a clinical and pathological entity, community organising pneumonia may present with atypical clinical and pathological features, such as intra-alveolar fillings of fibrin balls and organising tissue that resembles acute respiratory distress syndrome or diffuse alveolar damage. The latter characteristics constitute a recently described anatomoclinical entity called acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia. CASE PRESENTATION: Here, we describe a rare case of acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia, in an otherwise healthy 65-year-old Greek woman who complained of dry cough, fever, weight loss and progressive dyspnoea. She had never been a smoker. Her clinical symptoms showed a rapid deterioration in the two weeks before admission, despite a course of oral antibiotics. After excluding infection and malignancy with routine laboratory tests and flexible bronchoscopy, high resolution computed tomography and video assisted thoracoscopic lung biopsy were performed. Diagnosis was based on radiological features typical of community organising pneumonia coupled with pathologic features characteristic of acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia. The patient was treated with corticosteroids and showed excellent clinical and radiological response three months after treatment initiation. CONCLUSION: Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia is an extremely rare pathologic entity, often misdiagnosed as typical community organising pneumonia. To our knowledge, this is the seventh case of acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia in the literature, with no identifiable cause or association in a female patient, with no underlying lung disease or known exposures and with an unremarkable previous medical history. We highlight the need for careful review of lung biopsies from patients with clinical and radiologic characteristics typical of community organising pneumonia. Although it remains uncertain whether fibrin alters the favourable prognosis and treatment response of community organising pneumonia, it becomes obvious that a thorough pathologic review, apart from establishing the diagnosis of acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia, may predict a more unfavorable outcome therefore alerting the clinician to administer more aggressive and prolonged therapeutic regimens. BioMed Central 2009-10-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2783073/ /pubmed/19946550 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-3-74 Text en Copyright ©2009 Tzouvelekis et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case report
Tzouvelekis, Argyris
Koutsopoulos, Anastasios
Oikonomou, Anastasia
Froudarakis, Marios
Zarogoulidis, Pavlos
Steiropoulos, Paschalis
Mikroulis, Dimitrios
Antoniades, Antonis
Bouros, Demosthenes
Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia: a case report and review of the literature
title Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia: a case report and review of the literature
title_full Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia: a case report and review of the literature
title_fullStr Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia: a case report and review of the literature
title_full_unstemmed Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia: a case report and review of the literature
title_short Acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia: a case report and review of the literature
title_sort acute fibrinous and organising pneumonia: a case report and review of the literature
topic Case report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2783073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19946550
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-3-74
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