A Cavity in the Infectious Differential: An Atypical Pulmonary Lesion

Background: Pulmonary endometriosis is a rare form of endometriosis, with the diagnosis often missed or delayed as infectious etiologies are often higher on the differential. Case Description: A 13-year-old female, presented to the local children's hospital with 18 months of periodic hemoptysis...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dr Bradford Becken, Dr Andrea Green Hines, Dr Abigail Drucker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-03-01
Series:International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1201971224005393
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850043502633680896
author Dr Bradford Becken
Dr Andrea Green Hines
Dr Abigail Drucker
author_facet Dr Bradford Becken
Dr Andrea Green Hines
Dr Abigail Drucker
author_sort Dr Bradford Becken
collection DOAJ
description Background: Pulmonary endometriosis is a rare form of endometriosis, with the diagnosis often missed or delayed as infectious etiologies are often higher on the differential. Case Description: A 13-year-old female, presented to the local children's hospital with 18 months of periodic hemoptysis, shortness of breath with exertion, and a 4kg weight loss. Her medical history was non-contributory aside from a spontaneous left apical pneumothorax that coincided with the start of the hemoptysis. A chest X-ray showed a right upper lobe cavitary lesion. Infectious Diseases was then consulted to assist with management. A chest CT scan confirmed the cavitary lesion, and the patient underwent bronchoscopy, and testing for tuberculosis and histoplasmosis. The bronchoscopy showed erythematous mucosa. An interferon gamma release assay was negative, as were acid-fast stains from her bronchoscopy and sputum samples.At follow-up, symptoms were unchanged. Testing for echinococcosis, paragonimiasis, HIV, hepatitis B & C, sarcoidosis and ANCA-mediated vasculitis was negative. The patient was then evaluated by gynecology, and reported monthly cycles lasting 5 days without dysmenorrhea. A review of the timing of the episodes of hemoptysis was suggestive of pulmonary endometriosis. The patient was counseled on hormonal medications with the goal of inducing atrophy of the pulmonary endometriosis lesion, but she declined for fear of medication induced weight gain. Discussion: Endometriosis affects up to 15% of postmenarchael females, causing pain and cramping during menstruation. While endometriosis is often confined to the pelvis and abdominal cavity up to 12% involve thoracic spread. The pathogenesis of pulmonary endometriosis is unclear, but theories include hematologic spread of stem cells and coelomic metaplasia in which epithelial cells may be stimulated to differentiate into endometrial cells. Patients with pulmonary endometriosis often present with symptoms years after the onset of pelvic endometriosis. Cases of isolated thoracic endometriosis are rarer, and the majority have pleural over parenchymal involvement.Because of the atypical symptoms of pulmonary endometriosis, a diagnosis if often delayed or missed. In patients with cavitary lesions and hemoptysis, tuberculosis and histoplasmosis are often the primary suspected etiologies. Catamenial pneumothorax is often the presenting symptom, with the initial diagnosis missed in this case. Diagnosis is often made with a combination of patient history, imaging and bronchoscopy, but bronchoscopy results are affected by the timing of the study with the patient's menses. Treatment of pulmonary endometriosis mirrors that of pelvic endometriosis; pharmacologic contraceptives and surgery, though definitive guidelines do not exist. Common complications of pulmonary endometriosis include ongoing bleeding, chronic cough, pulmonary scarring and catamenial pneumothorax, resulting in the need for recurrent medical and procedural interventions. Conclusion: While pulmonary cavitary lesions are suggestive of tuberculosis, in postmenarcheal females, pulmonary/thoracic endometriosis should be considered, especially if accompanied by ground glass opacities on imaging and unexplained pneumothorax.
format Article
id doaj-art-d49c81c38aa94c2893f2d374f38d48c5
institution DOAJ
issn 1201-9712
language English
publishDate 2025-03-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series International Journal of Infectious Diseases
spelling doaj-art-d49c81c38aa94c2893f2d374f38d48c52025-08-20T02:55:13ZengElsevierInternational Journal of Infectious Diseases1201-97122025-03-0115210746410.1016/j.ijid.2024.107464A Cavity in the Infectious Differential: An Atypical Pulmonary LesionDr Bradford Becken0Dr Andrea Green Hines1Dr Abigail Drucker2University Of Nebraska Medical CenterUniversity Of Nebraska Medical CenterUniversity Of Nebraska Medical CenterBackground: Pulmonary endometriosis is a rare form of endometriosis, with the diagnosis often missed or delayed as infectious etiologies are often higher on the differential. Case Description: A 13-year-old female, presented to the local children's hospital with 18 months of periodic hemoptysis, shortness of breath with exertion, and a 4kg weight loss. Her medical history was non-contributory aside from a spontaneous left apical pneumothorax that coincided with the start of the hemoptysis. A chest X-ray showed a right upper lobe cavitary lesion. Infectious Diseases was then consulted to assist with management. A chest CT scan confirmed the cavitary lesion, and the patient underwent bronchoscopy, and testing for tuberculosis and histoplasmosis. The bronchoscopy showed erythematous mucosa. An interferon gamma release assay was negative, as were acid-fast stains from her bronchoscopy and sputum samples.At follow-up, symptoms were unchanged. Testing for echinococcosis, paragonimiasis, HIV, hepatitis B & C, sarcoidosis and ANCA-mediated vasculitis was negative. The patient was then evaluated by gynecology, and reported monthly cycles lasting 5 days without dysmenorrhea. A review of the timing of the episodes of hemoptysis was suggestive of pulmonary endometriosis. The patient was counseled on hormonal medications with the goal of inducing atrophy of the pulmonary endometriosis lesion, but she declined for fear of medication induced weight gain. Discussion: Endometriosis affects up to 15% of postmenarchael females, causing pain and cramping during menstruation. While endometriosis is often confined to the pelvis and abdominal cavity up to 12% involve thoracic spread. The pathogenesis of pulmonary endometriosis is unclear, but theories include hematologic spread of stem cells and coelomic metaplasia in which epithelial cells may be stimulated to differentiate into endometrial cells. Patients with pulmonary endometriosis often present with symptoms years after the onset of pelvic endometriosis. Cases of isolated thoracic endometriosis are rarer, and the majority have pleural over parenchymal involvement.Because of the atypical symptoms of pulmonary endometriosis, a diagnosis if often delayed or missed. In patients with cavitary lesions and hemoptysis, tuberculosis and histoplasmosis are often the primary suspected etiologies. Catamenial pneumothorax is often the presenting symptom, with the initial diagnosis missed in this case. Diagnosis is often made with a combination of patient history, imaging and bronchoscopy, but bronchoscopy results are affected by the timing of the study with the patient's menses. Treatment of pulmonary endometriosis mirrors that of pelvic endometriosis; pharmacologic contraceptives and surgery, though definitive guidelines do not exist. Common complications of pulmonary endometriosis include ongoing bleeding, chronic cough, pulmonary scarring and catamenial pneumothorax, resulting in the need for recurrent medical and procedural interventions. Conclusion: While pulmonary cavitary lesions are suggestive of tuberculosis, in postmenarcheal females, pulmonary/thoracic endometriosis should be considered, especially if accompanied by ground glass opacities on imaging and unexplained pneumothorax.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1201971224005393
spellingShingle Dr Bradford Becken
Dr Andrea Green Hines
Dr Abigail Drucker
A Cavity in the Infectious Differential: An Atypical Pulmonary Lesion
International Journal of Infectious Diseases
title A Cavity in the Infectious Differential: An Atypical Pulmonary Lesion
title_full A Cavity in the Infectious Differential: An Atypical Pulmonary Lesion
title_fullStr A Cavity in the Infectious Differential: An Atypical Pulmonary Lesion
title_full_unstemmed A Cavity in the Infectious Differential: An Atypical Pulmonary Lesion
title_short A Cavity in the Infectious Differential: An Atypical Pulmonary Lesion
title_sort cavity in the infectious differential an atypical pulmonary lesion
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1201971224005393
work_keys_str_mv AT drbradfordbecken acavityintheinfectiousdifferentialanatypicalpulmonarylesion
AT drandreagreenhines acavityintheinfectiousdifferentialanatypicalpulmonarylesion
AT drabigaildrucker acavityintheinfectiousdifferentialanatypicalpulmonarylesion
AT drbradfordbecken cavityintheinfectiousdifferentialanatypicalpulmonarylesion
AT drandreagreenhines cavityintheinfectiousdifferentialanatypicalpulmonarylesion
AT drabigaildrucker cavityintheinfectiousdifferentialanatypicalpulmonarylesion