Pulmonary aspergillosis in patients with AIDS. Clinical and radiographic correlations
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the clinical and radiographic features of pulmonary aspergillosis as they present in AIDS patients; in particular, to determine similarities and differences between Aspergillus infection in patients with AIDS vs those without AIDS. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Six new cases of confir...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Chest 1994-01, Vol.105 (1), p.37-44 |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the clinical and radiographic features of pulmonary aspergillosis as they present in AIDS patients;
in particular, to determine similarities and differences between Aspergillus infection in patients with AIDS vs those without
AIDS. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Six new cases of confirmed or probable pulmonary aspergillosis were discovered during a search
of hospital records. These are reviewed with 30 previously reported cases with special attention to radiographic appearance
of disease and how radiographic appearance influences clinical outcome. RESULTS: Symptoms of pulmonary aspergillosis in AIDS
were nonspecific, most often including fever, cough, and dyspnea, and less commonly, chest pain or hemoptysis. Major risk
factors for the development of pulmonary aspergillosis in patients with AIDS were steroid administration and neutropenia.
Neutropenia was often a complication of therapies for AIDS, in particular, ganciclovir and zidovudine. Radiographic appearance
of disease could be divided into three general categories. One third of the patients (13/36) presented with cavitary upper
lobe disease resembling noninvasive or chronic necrotizing aspergillosis. Fatal hemoptysis occurred in 42 percent of patients
with this form of disease. Twenty-two percent (8/36) of the cases presented as a nondescript focal alveolar opacity similar
to invasive aspergillosis. In several patients, the focal infiltrate remained stable for several months, a feature that is
unusual for aspergillosis in non-AIDS patients. The air crescent sign was present in none of the 36 reported cases. Patients
with only focal disease had the best prognosis of patients with pulmonary aspergillosis. Bilateral alveolar or interstitial
disease similar to invasive aspergillosis was present in 23 percent (9/36) of the patients. Bilateral disease appears to be
a marker for disseminated infection and was associated with a high mortality due to aspergillosis. Two new forms of bronchial
aspergillosis (5/36 cases) have been described previously. These patients presented with either obstructing fungal casts or
bronchial pseudomembranes demonstrated bronchoscopically. In some patients with the bronchial forms of aspergillosis, transient
alveolar opacities were seen on chest radiographs. These opacities may represent regions of atelectasis due to airway obstruction.
One patient who had bilateral pneumothoraces without parenchymal opacities did not correspond to any of the three previously
menti |
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ISSN: | 0012-3692 1931-3543 |
DOI: | 10.1378/chest.105.1.37 |