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Case #1
Demographics: 54 years old, Male
Indication: Pneumonia in immunocompromised patient

Case #1

Findings

  • Rounded opacity centered in the superior segment of the left lower lobe with a crescent of air noted.  The opacity does not appear to displace or cross the major fissure
  • No pleural effusion or pneumothorax
  • Normal size and configuration of the cardiopericardial silhouette

Diagnosis

Angioinvasive aspergillosis

Sample Report

Rounded opacity centered in the superior segment of the left lower lobe with a crescent of air noted along its inferior aspect. This appearance is concerning for atypical pneumonia, in particular invasive aspergillosis. Consider chest CT for further evaluation.

Discussion

  • Pulmonary aspergillosis has many different imaging appearances. Think about it as four different entities which are distinguished by the immune status of the patient:
  1. Hyperimmune - allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA)
    • Especially patients with asthma
    • Upper lobe predominant bronchiectasis and bronchial plugging (finger-in-glove appearance)
  2. Normal immune - aspergilloma
    • Patients with preexisting lung cavities
    • Look for soft tissue density filling a cavity. A rim of gas around a fungal ball can look like a crescent, but is more correctly referred to as the Monod sign to separate this from the more ominous crescent sign of angioinvasive aspergillosis
  3. Mildly immunocompromised - semi-invasive (aka chronic necrotizing) aspergillosis
    • Patients at risk include those with chronic diseases like diabetes, COPD, or malnutrition as well as those with chronic corticosteroid use
    • Imaging features are very similar to those of reactivation tuberculosis with areas of consolidation and nodularity, sometimes with cavitation
  4. Full-blown immunocompromised - invasive aspergillosis
    • Neutropenic patients and patients with AIDS
    • Airways invasive subtype: bronchial thickening and tree-in-bud nodularity, which can appear identical to atypical bacterial infections
    • Angioinvasive subtype: nodular opacities with groundglass halos or peripheral wedge shaped areas of consolidation. Air crescent sign can be seen during the healing phase as tissue necroses and retracts

Annotated Images & Illustrations

Rounded opacity centered in the superior aspect of the left lower lobe with an air crescent (red arrows).

Rounded opacity centered in the superior aspect of the left lower lobe with an air crescent (red arrows).

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