[Invasive aspergillosis in the hematologic patient: the usefulness of computed tomographic and high-resolution computed tomographic studies].

1996 
: Invasive aspergillosis is an emerging cause of death in hematologic patients. Several patterns of lung involvement are described: acute tracheobronchitis, bronchopneumonia, pleural aspergillosis and angioinvasive aspergillosis. The latter pattern is the most common one; it is characterized by different signs, some of which, supported by clinical data, are quite suggestive for fungal etiology. Particularly, nodules and/or wedge-shaped lesions with a ground-glass halo are a useful early feature, best detected by HRCT. Early therapy with amphotericin B may improve survival chances. Therefore, in neutropenia patients we decided, when possible, to perform high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) as soon as fever appears. This was feasible in 8 of 32 patients with invasive aspergillosis examined with HRCT. Immediate treatment with amphotericin B in one such patient showing a nodule with the halo sign allowed the lesion to completely disappear. The authors describe the frequency of different radiologic signs in 32 patients, as observed in 54 HRCT exams; the results are compared with those obtained with conventional CT and chest X-ray. Compared to chest X-ray, CT detects more lesions and is more sensitive to small pneumothorax and minimal pleural effusion or thickening. HRCT is more suitable to detect initial cavitation and thin ground-glass haloes.
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