Purpose Although childhood asthma is a risk factor for adult lung function disorders, the correlation between childhood asthma control level and lung function growth remains unclear in Japan. The correlation between childhood asthma control and early adulthood lung function growth was investigated in this study. Patients and Methods We included 505 children with asthma from the Omuta City Air Pollution-Related Health Damage Cohort Program. The characteristics and lung function of girls and boys aged 6–11 years and 12–17 years were compared between poor and good asthma control groups. Results Among the 505 children, 214 (42.4%) showed poor asthma control. The mean percentage forced expiratory volume in 1 second predicted for girls and boys aged 6–11 years (80.2% and 79.2%, respectively) and 12–17 years (80.0% and 81.1%, respectively) in the poor control group was significantly lower than those of girls and boys aged 6–11 years (87.9% and 87.3%, respectively) and 12–17 years (88.1% and 87.8%, respectively) in the good control group. However, a linear regression model did not reveal between-group differences in the slopes of lung function growth for both sexes. Girls (24.6%, P < 0.0001) and boys (24.4%, P = 0.0026) in the poor control group had a significantly higher proportion of young adults with obstructive ventilatory patterns than girls (1.4%) and boys (8.1%) in the good control group. Conclusion Our findings revealed that poor childhood asthma control leaded to lung function disorders, which suggest the importance of early asthma control in school children.
Paragonimiasis caused by trematodes belonging to the genus Paragonimus is often accompanied by chronic respiratory symptoms such as cough, the accumulation of sputum, hemoptysis, and chest pain. Prolonged symptoms, including respiratory symptoms, after coronavirus disease 2019 infection (COVID-19) are collectively called post-COVID-19 conditions. Paragonimiasis and COVID-19 may cause similar respiratory symptoms. We encountered five cases of paragonimiasis in patients in Japan for whom diagnoses were delayed due to the initial characterization of the respiratory symptoms as a post-COVID-19 condition. The patients had consumed homemade drunken freshwater crabs together. One to three weeks after consuming the crabs, four of the five patients were diagnosed with probable COVID-19. The major symptoms reported included cough, dyspnea, and chest pain. The major imaging findings were pleural effusion, pneumothorax, and nodular lesions of the lung. All the patients were diagnosed with paragonimiasis based on a serum antibody test and peripheral blood eosinophilia (560–15,610 cells/μL) and were treated successfully with 75 mg/kg/day praziquantel for 3 days. Before diagnosing a post-COVID-19 condition, it is necessary to consider whether other diseases, including paragonimiasis, may explain the symptoms. Further, chest radiographic or blood tests should be performed in patients with persistent respiratory symptoms after being infected with COVID-19 to avoid overlooking the possibility of infection.
Pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP) is a lung disease characterized by accumulation of lipid-rich proteinaceous materials that stain positive with periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) in the pulmonary alveolar space [1,2]. Although autoimmune PAP, pulmonary asbestosis, and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis/usual interstitial pneumonia (IPF/UIP) are independent pulmonary disorders, cases of secondary PAP caused by asbestosis or PAP-leading pulmonary fibrosis may occur occasionally. Differential diagnosis among these diseases is important but difficult. Here we report a case of autoimmune PAP with pulmonary asbestosis-like features including asbestos bodies in the lung tissue and pleural thickening on high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT), and a histologically possible UIP pattern. CASE REPORT A 78-year-old man visited a local hospital in May 2016 because of persistent productive cough and ground-glass opacities (GGOs) were observed on a chest radiograph and HRCT at a nearby hospital in May 2016. The productive cough eventually resolved, but the chest radiograph and HRCT showed expansion
A man in his 60s exhibited persistent dry cough and dyspnoea, which persisted even after smoking cessation. Chest high-resolution CT showed diffuse ground-glass opacities in the subpleural areas of both lungs. He underwent bronchoscopy, but no definitive diagnosis could be made. Histopathological analysis of the specimen obtained by surgical lung biopsy showed a desquamative interstitial pneumonia (DIP) pattern, with lymphocyte and plasma cell infiltrates in the alveolar septa; the ratio of IgG and IgG4-positive cells was more than 90%. He quit smoking, but the radiological findings worsened. Based on the pathological findings, we diagnosed the patient with DIP due to IgG4-related lung disease. Prednisolone was initiated, and the symptoms and radiological findings improved.
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