Pulmonary nodular lymphoid hyperplasia is a reactive lymphoproliferative disease. It is very rare, which means that many aspects of the disease are unknown or have not been proven. Pulmonary nodular lymphoid hyperplasia can be symptomatic or asymptomatic, progressive or not, and solitary or multiple, and a surgical approach is the current treatment of choice. We present a case of pulmonary nodular lymphoid hyperplasia that w as v isualized a s multiple g round glass opacities on a c omputed tomography ( C T) s can, a nd o bserved for 1 year because the patient was pregnant. Over this period, the number and extent of the opacities progressed, but no symptoms were reported. A surgical biopsy was done and some remaining lesions regressed on follow-up CT scans, while others progressed, without any appearance of symptoms.
CITATION STYLE
Park, J. Y., Park, S. Y., Haam, S., Jung, J., & Koh, Y. W. (2018). Pulmonary nodular lymphoid hyperplasia in a 33-year-old woman. Korean Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 51(2), 133–137. https://doi.org/10.5090/kjtcs.2018.51.2.133
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.