1. Progressive dyspnea due to pulmonary carcinoid tumorlets
- Author
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Anastasios Kallianos, Lemonia Velentza, Paul Zarogoulidis, M.D, Ph. D, Sofia Baka, Christoforos Kosmidis, Sofia Labaki, George Lazaridis, Haidong Huang, Wolfgang Hohenforst-Schmidt, and Georgia Trakada
- Subjects
Pulmonary carcinoid tumorlet ,Dyspnea ,Neuroendocrine lung cells hyperplasia ,Nodules ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
This is a case description of a female patient, 77 years-old, who presented with progressive dyspnea and cough. She had a mild hypoxemia in the arterial blood gases (PaO2 72 mmHg) and normal spirometry. The chest computer tomography revealed diffuse “ground glass” opacities, segmental alveolitis, bronchiectasis, fibrotic lesions and numerous micronodules. A thoracoscopy was performed and the obtained biopsy showed carcinoid tumorlets, with positive CK8/18, CD56, TTF-1 and synaptophysin immunohistochemical markers. Pulmonary carcinoid tumorlets are rare, benign lesions and individuals with tumorlets are typically asymptomatic. Our report presents a symptomatic clinical case of carcinoid tumorlet.
- Published
- 2017
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