Pulmonary actinomycosis diagnosed by video-assisted thoracic surgery with a growing fungus ball within a small cavity
Ichiro Hirukawaa Takeshi Sarayaa Ryota Tanakab Masachika Fujiwarac Haruyuki Ishiia Hajime Gotoa
aDepartment of Respiratory Medicine, Kyorin University School of Medicine
bDepartment of Surgery, Kyorin University School of Medicine
cDepartment of Pathology, Kyorin University School of Medicine
A 43-year-old man was referred to our hospital with symptoms of blood-stained sputum, low-grade fever, and left thoracic pain that had begun a few weeks earlier. A chest X-ray and thoracic computed tomography (CT) showed air-space consolidation with a cavity in the left upper lung. The patient was diagnosed with a lung abscess, and after four weeks of treatment with amoxicillin/clavulanate, his symptoms subsided. A chest X-ray performed at that time seemed to indicate that the lesion had disappeared. However, one month after the completion of treatment, the patient experienced a flare-up of respiratory symptoms. Five months after the initial treatment, a thoracic CT revealed a 2-mm fungus ball-like nodule in the residual-cavity area. Under diagnosis with a recurrence of lung abscess, a subsequent second course of amoxicillin/clavulanate over four months failed to control the patient's symptoms. Furthermore, the fungus ball-like nodule in the cavity was gradually increasing in size. Nine months after the first course of treatment, video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) was performed, and a resected specimen from the left upper lobe confirmed that the size of the cavity was 15 mm; moreover, it contained sulfur granules. Thus he was diagnosed with pulmonary actinomycosis. Only two cases of this rare radiological pattern of pulmonary actinomycosis with a fungus ball-like nodule within a cavity have ever been reported. Also, this is the first report showing the long-term generating process of a fungus ball-like nodule within a small cavity on follow-up thoracic CT, which by use of VATS biopsy was later identified as sulfur granules with pathological characteristic findings of a cavity wall.
Pulmonary actinomycosis Fungus ball Cavity Sulfur granules
Received 10 Aug 2011 / Accepted 6 Mar 2012
AJRS, 1(6): 464-469, 2012