Cases reported "Thoracic Diseases"

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1/15. Primary posterior chest wall echinococcosis.

    Hydatid cyst is not mentioned among the chest wall tumours in areas not known to harbour echinococcosis. One of the uncommon sites for echinococcosis even in endemic countries is the chest wall. The striking resemblance between neoplasm and hydatid cysts forms a diagnostic dilemma and makes the correct diagnosis essential before surgery.
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ranking = 1
keywords = neoplasm
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2/15. Thoracic lymphadenopathy in hiv patients: spectrum of disease and differential diagnosis.

    To evaluate the etiology and differential features of intrathoracic lymphadenopathy (LAD) in hiv patients, chest computed tomography (CT) records from an 18-month period were reviewed to identify all hiv-positive patients with intrathoracic LAD (nodal size > or = 1 cm). medical records were reviewed for the documentation of specific diseases causing LAD and the CD4 count at the time of imaging. Of 45 hiv-positive patients with LAD, 40 had specific diagnoses including 22 (55%) infections and 17 (43%) tumors; one patient had both (3%). Mycobacterial disease accounted for 78% of infections; five cases were secondary to bacterial pneumonia and sepsis. Of tumors, lymphoma (7 cases, 39%) was most common, followed by lung cancer, germ cell tumors, and Kaposi's sarcoma. Mean CD4 cell count in patients with tumors was much higher than in patients with infections (314 vs. 62, p < .01). patients with tumors were somewhat more likely than patients with infections to demonstrate axillary adenopathy (29 vs. 5%, p = .068). Cavitary disease was only observed in patients with infections (27%, p < .03). CT and clinical findings may help direct the differential diagnosis of LAD in AIDS, and promote expedient definitive diagnosis and therapy.
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ranking = 2.0066133064762
keywords = cancer
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3/15. Accessory spleens in the thoracic and abdominal cavities after a relapse of idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura: a case report.

    This case report presents a highly unusual finding of ectopic splenic tissue in both the thoracic and abdominal cavities in a patient with recurrent idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP).
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ranking = 16.565927505414
keywords = spleen
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4/15. Thoracolithiasis.

    Thoracolithiasis without any history of chest traumas or interventions is pathologically rare, with only 9 cases including our 2, reported thus far in the literature. Case 1: A 76-year-old man admitted to our hospital had an abnormal shadow in chest radiography that gradually enlarged. serum carcinoembrionic antigen was slightly elevated during follow-up. A milky white tumor 1.5 cm in diameter with many projections was found in the thoracic cavity and removed by thoracoscopy. Histopathological examination showed the tumor to consist of fibrous tissue with fatty necrosis at the core. Case 2: A 54-year-old woman admitted to our hospital had an abnormal shadow in chest screening radiography in 1998. Transbronchial biopsy showed this shadow to be lung adenocarcinoma. A small trigonal pyramid-shaped milky white nodule 5 mm in diameter was found in the thorax during lobectomy for lung cancer. Histopathological examination showed this nodule also to consist of fibrous tissue with fatty necrosis.
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ranking = 2.0066133064762
keywords = cancer
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5/15. myositis ossificans of the chest wall simulating malignant neoplasm.

    myositis ossificans originating from the chest wall is extremely rare. We report a case of myositis ossificans occurring in a young woman with progressive painful swelling in the chest wall. Preoperative examination suggested a malignant neoplasm originating from soft tissue. Although rare, myositis ossificans is one of the potential causes of painful swelling in the chest wall, and can be mistaken for a malignant neoplasm.
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ranking = 6
keywords = neoplasm
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6/15. Tumour-like presentation of pulmonary sarcoidosis.

    We report a case of pulmonary sarcoidosis, which initially presented as a left apical infiltrate. The later course mimicked a pulmonary neoplasm, with left upper lobe atelectasis secondary to bronchial stenosis, resulting from both endobronchial sarcoidosis and extrinsic compression by enlarged lymph nodes. Extrinsic pressure from sarcoid nodes on the left main pulmonary artery and recurrent laryngeal nerve, also caused a reduction in pulmonary parenchymal perfusion and left vocal cord paresis.
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ranking = 1
keywords = neoplasm
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7/15. Thoracic splenosis twenty-nine years after traumatic splenectomy mimicking intrathoracic neoplasm.

    Thoracic splenosis refers to a condition of ectopic splenic tissue in the thoracic cavity. It is usually a consequence of splenic tissue seeding in the pleural cavity after thoracoabdominal trauma. A rare case of thoracic splenosis, in a 62-year-old man who had had a traumatic splenectomy due to thoracoabdominal trauma 29 years earlier, is reported. The patient, a heavy smoker, was admitted for evaluation of a left-side thoracic lesion discovered on a plain chest film. bronchoscopy, CT scan and needle biopsy proved inconclusive for the diagnosis. Exploratory thoracotomy was necessary to establish the diagnosis. During the operation, a thoracic splenosis was confirmed. To date, only 28 cases of thoracic splenosis have been reported in the literature. The purpose of this report is to present a new case of splenosis of the thoracic cavity simulating intrathoracic neoplasm.
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ranking = 5
keywords = neoplasm
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8/15. Surgically removed thoracolithiasis: report of two cases.

    Thoracolithiasis is a rare condition with only 12 cases of surgically removed nodules reported in the literature. We report 2 additional cases. Case 1: A 19-year-old male admitted with an abnormal shadow on a chest X-ray. Computed tomography (CT) revealed a nodule in the right lower lung lobe. The material extirpated by thoracoscopy was milky white, glossy, and 1.6 cm in diameter. Histopathologically, it consisted of fatty necrotic tissue covered with hyalinized fibrous tissue. Case 2: A 78-year-old female, with a past history of breast cancer, admitted with an abnormal shadow on chest X-ray. CT revealed a nodule in the left lung S(1 2) segment, of which transbronchial biopsy findings indicated primary lung adenocarcinoma. Exploratory thoracoscopy incidentally revealed some pearly material, 0.4 cm in diameter, in the thoracic cavity. They were extirpated during left upper lobectomy for lung cancer; all of them demonstrated concentric hyalinized fibrous tissue. Thoracic surgeons should consider this condition in the differential diagnosis of a peripheral pulmonary nodule.
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ranking = 4.0132266129524
keywords = cancer
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9/15. Thoracic splenosis. diagnosis of a case by fine needle aspiration cytology.

    Fine needle aspiration cytology was used to study chest wall nodules in a patient who presented with fever, cough, pleuritic chest pain and cytomegalovirus infection and who had a previous history of abdominal trauma. The finding of splenic red pulp and white pulp in the aspirate, combined with the results of a radionucleotide liver-spleen scan, led to a diagnosis of thoracic splenosis, a relatively rare condition. splenosis is thought to result from transplantation of splenic tissue after trauma and may provide some added protection against certain infectious conditions, both of which were present in this case.
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ranking = 4.1414818763536
keywords = spleen
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10/15. Intrathoracic manifestations of disseminated prostatic adenocarcinoma.

    Four cases of disseminated adenocarcinoma of the prostate illustrating the clinical spectrum of intrathoracic involvement in this disease are presented. In two cases the presenting features of prostatic cancer were with lymphangitis carcinomatosa and an isolated pleural effusion, whereas two other cases developed intrathoracic metastases in the setting of previously known locally advanced prostatic cancer. In one this took the form of hilar and mediastinal lymphadenopathy and in the other that of pulmonary nodules. An immuno-cytochemical marker for prostatic specific antigen, a highly sensitive and specific tool for identifying prostatic epithelium, identified the prostate as the primary site of malignancy in the first two cases. Symptomatic and radiological responses were noted in all four cases after bilateral orchidectomy. Pulmonary metastases are common in the advanced stages of prostatic cancer but may also be present at the initial presentation with the disease even when the primary tumour is not clinically apparent. We recommend that (i) immuno-cytochemical stains for prostatic specific antigen are applied to all lung, pleural and mediastinal biopsy specimens showing adenocarcinoma in male patients, and (ii) all males with intrathoracic adenocarcinoma have prostatic aspiration cytology performed if the prostatic specific antigen stain is positive.
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ranking = 6.0198399194286
keywords = cancer
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