Basal ganglia T1 hyperintensity occurs in >23% of patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia and is associated with hepatic vascular malformations, hepatic dysfunction, and elevated cardiac output. The presence of this finding on screening MR imaging in patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia should prompt further evaluation for visceral lesions causing arteriovenous shunting.
Stevens–Johnson syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) are both rare but serious idiosyncratic drug reactions characterized by diffuse muco-epidermoid injury and high mortality. Keratinocytes in both skin and mucous membranes (including eyes, mouth and genitalia) are injured resulting in a diffuse maculopapular rash, blistering lesions and epithelial detachment with minimal force (Nikolsky's sign). SJS is typically diagnosed when less than 10% of the skin surface is involved and the term TEN is used in cases with more than 30% involvement. Respiratory involvement in SJS-TEN is common with 30–50% of cases demonstrating respiratory epithelial sloughing with severe short and long term complications. Patients who survive SJS-TEN are often left with impaired respiratory function and bronchiolitis obliterans. Cases of bronchiolitis obliterans with SJS/TEN have been very rarely reported. We report a case of phenytoin induced SJS/TEN followed by severe bronchiolitis obliterans in an adult patient. The presentation, pathophysiology and management of SJS/TEN related bronchiolitis obliterans is also reviewed.
A diagnosis of ‘chronic cough’ (CC) requires the exclusion of sinister pulmonary pathology, including infection and malignancy. We present a patient with a 3 month history of CC who had an extensive workup including a normal high resolution computed tomography of the chest (HRCT) 6 weeks prior to consultation at our center. He subsequently developed constitutional symptoms including weight loss and loss of appetite 5 weeks after initial consultation. A repeat HRCT chest and a subsequent whole body PET scan found that he had developed extensive pulmonary lymphangitic carcinomatosis (PLC) from a colon primary. Treatment of the colon cancer resulted in significant decrease in metastatic disease burden and cough resolution. PLC is a very rare cause of ‘chronic cough’ and incipient/occult PLC presenting with chronic cough and a normal initial HRCT chest has not been previously reported.
Antibiotic-associated colitis is a gastrointestinal complication of antibiotic use commonly seen in hospitalised patients, with colitis being the most common type. We present a case of haemorrhagic colitis secondary to following self-initiated amoxicillin-clavulanic acid use. An 85-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with abdominal pain and mucobloody diarrhoea. History was notable for an ongoing 5-day course of amoxicillin-clavulanic acid use. The CT scan of her abdomen revealed extensive diffuse thickening of the ascending and transverse colon. Stool culture grew , an established cause of haemorrhagic colitis. She declined colonoscopy but recovered with withdrawal of all antibiotics and conservative treatment. We should be vigilant to haemorrhagic colitis following antibiotic use which is not always related.
Multifocal micronodular pneumocyte hyperplasia (MMPH) is rare entity seen mostly in patients with the tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). We present the case of a 50 year old woman with TSC (confirmed TSC2 mutation) found to have multiple ground glass opacities with an upper lobe predominance on a screening chest CT. No abnormalities were detected in other viscera. A thoracoscopic lung biopsy obtained from right upper lobe confirmed the diagnosis of MMPH. There were no lesions suggestive of lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) either on the chest CT or lung biopsy. A repeat CT chest obtained on follow up 9 years after initial diagnosis continued to show stability of all MMPH ground glass lesions. This case highlights the distinct patterns of lung involvement in TSC, with MMPH having a benign and stable nature as compared to LAM which is often relentlessly progressive with associated lung function decline.
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