Pulmonary actinomycosis appearing as a "ball-in-hole" on chest radiography and bronchoscopy

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Abstract

A 40 year old diabetic man with pulmonary actinomycosis was admitted to hospital with recurrent haemoptysis. The chest radiograph showed an air meniscus in the left upper lobe, a rare presentation of pulmonary actinomycosis. Bronchoscopic examination revealed a mass in a cavity which has never been reported previously. He underwent lobectomy and the surgical specimen revealed sulphur granules, the typical pathological finding of actinomycosis, without evidence of fungal or mycobacterial infection.

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Hsieh, M. J., Shieh, W. B., Chen, K. S., Yu, T. J., Kuo, H. P., & Tsai, Y. H. (1996). Pulmonary actinomycosis appearing as a “ball-in-hole” on chest radiography and bronchoscopy. Thorax, 51(2), 221–222. https://doi.org/10.1136/thx.51.2.221

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