Journal List > Tuberc Respir Dis > v.64(2) > 1001195

Moon, Jung, Kim, Park, Kim, and Shin: A Case of Pulmonary Paragonimiasis Presented as Solitary Pulmonary Nodule and Suspected as Lung Cancer on 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose Positron Emission Tomography

Abstract

Pulmonary paragonimiasis continues to be a diagnostically challenging parasitic disease, despite a drastically decreased prevalence in South Korea during the past decade. Pulmonary paragonimiasis is characterized by fever, chest pain, and chronic cough with hemoptysis. Numerous radiographic and computed tomographic findings including the presence of pneumothorax, pleural effusion, and parenchymal lesions such as nodular or infiltrative opacities have been reported. The clinical and radiological manifestations of paragonimiasis can resemble those of lung cancer, tuberculosis or a metastatic malignancy. Furthermore, this disease can mimic lung cancer as seen on 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET). We report a case of pulmonary paragonimiasis in a 48-year old man that presented with a solitary pulmonary nodule and was suspected as a lung cancer based on FDG-PET imaging.

Figures and Tables

Figure 1
Chest computed tomography (CT) showed ill-defined nodular consolidation at apicoposterior segment of left upper lobe (A, B). The size of this spiculate lesion enlarged with increase of solid component, 2 months later (C, D).
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Figure 2
There was about 2×2.5 cm sized hypermetabolized lung nodule with peripheral ground glass opacity (GGO) in hilar area of left upper lobe (pSUV 3.9 g/ml). Mild increased FDG uptake in left hilar node, suggestive of lymph node metastasis, was also noted.
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Figure 3
Gross specimen of left upper lobe (A) showed a poorly demarcated multilocular yellowish gray cystic lesion at the cut surface, measuring 2×2.4 cm. Histology of the resected mass revealed chronic granulomatous inflammation with adult parasite and many eggs, consistent with paragonimiasis (B, C. hematoxylin and eosin, ×200, ×400).
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