Background: There is currently no consensus on the morphology of severe fibrotic pulmonary sarcoidosis, and we examined computed tomography (CT) findings and progression. Methods: We analyzed findings in 10 consecutive patients (three men, seven women) with pulmonary sarcoidosis requiring oxygen therapy for chronic respiratory failure, who were extracted from >2500 sarcoidosis patients (three hospitals, 2000–2018). Patients with comorbidities causing chronic respiratory failure were excluded. Results: Predominant findings were consolidations along the bronchovascular bundles comprising ‘central-peripheral band’, traction bronchiectasis, peripheral cysts/bullae, and upper lobe shrinkage. Traction bronchiectasis arose from opacities comprising ‘central-peripheral band’. Clustering of traction bronchiectasis at the distal side formed honeycomb lung-like structures in three patients. Upper lobe shrinkage progressed in seven patients together with progression of consolidations, ‘central-peripheral band’, traction bronchiectasis clusters, and cysts, while patients without shrinkage included two patients with severe multiple cysts without traction bronchiectasis. Restrictive ventilatory impairment developed in most patients. Pulmonary hypertension (PH) was detected radiologically in five patients, and chronic progressive pulmonary aspergillosis (CPPA) in four patients. Conclusions: During progression, consolidations comprising ‘central-peripheral band’ progressed together with traction bronchiectasis clusters and peripheral cysts, resulting in upper lobe shrinkage. This may lead to respiratory failure with possible complications such as PH and CPPA.
Although antiphospholipid antibody syndrome (APS) is an autoimmune condition that is primarily characterized by arterial or venous thrombosis or pregnancy morbidity and the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL), recent reviews have introduced non-thromboembolic manifestations. We describe the case of a 58-year-old woman with vegetation on the aortic valve, whose initial presentation of APS abruptly developed into diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage. Despite consecutive plasma exchange procedures and the administration of corticosteroids and high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin, multiple brain infarctions developed, and the patient died of pneumonia. Although anecdotal, this case might serve as a useful example of the non-standard complications of fulminant APS.
We herein report a rare case of pulmonary sarcoidosis leading to chronic respiratory failure with restrictive ventilatory impairment during a 53-year-long observation period. Nine years after the histological diagnosis of stage I sarcoidosis on chest X-ray in a woman in her 20s, she developed bilateral reticular and granular opacities on chest computed tomography and was started on prednisone for 18 years. Seven years after prednisone withdrawal, these persisting opacities around the bronchovascular bundle, including a centralperipheral band, had progressed, forming traction bronchiectasis clusters and peripheral cysts, some of which developed continuously at the distal side of these clusters, with eventual upper lobe shrinkage.
In the clinical setting, it is often difficult to judge whether honeycomb-like structures represent progression of fibrosis in pulmonary sarcoidosis or a complication by interstitial pneumonitis. This report described a valuable case in which pathology of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery specimens collected from the lungs with honeycomb-like structures that were continuous with the dilated bronchioles on chest computed tomography (CT) showed granulomas in the membranous bronchiole walls, thereby demonstrating that the honeycomb-like structures were lung lesions of sarcoidosis. Pathological features of these structures on chest CT included cystic changes attributable to incorporation of peripheral alveoli into dilated bronchioles in lobules: these findings in lung sarcoidosis were different from those corresponding to honeycomb lung in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis/usual interstitial pneumonia. Radiological and pathological findings showed the possibility that progressive clustering of dilated bronchi and bronchioles causes cystic changes, resulting in the formation of honeycomb-like structures as fibrosis progresses in sarcoidosis with lung involvement.
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