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Case Reports
. 2004 Feb;21(1):137-40.
doi: 10.1016/s0761-8425(04)71245-0.

[Bronchial erosion of mediastinal lymphadenopathy associates with Hodgkin's disease]

[Article in French]
Affiliations
Case Reports

[Bronchial erosion of mediastinal lymphadenopathy associates with Hodgkin's disease]

[Article in French]
G Brinchault et al. Rev Mal Respir. 2004 Feb.

Abstract

Introduction: Erosion of mediastinal adenopathy into the bronchial tree is classically associated with tuberculosis. We describe two cases of of such bronchial erosion with Hodgkin's disease.

Case report: The first case was of a seventy-year old man with a history of pulmonary silicosis. A sub-carenal mass was identified during investigation of chronic cough. The bronchoscopy revealed an inflammatory stenosis due to Hodgkin's disease. The second case was of a thirteen-year old child whose Hodgkin's disease was thought to be in remission following treatment. The erosion of mediastinal adenopathy into the main left bronchus produced complete left pulmonary atalectasis, which required endobronchial stenting.

Conclusions: In both cases, rigid bronchoscopy provided a histological diagnosis with diagnosis of Hodgkin's disease in the first case, and identification of recurrence in the other one. These cases are unusual. Such complications are usually complications of radiotherapy. Classically, erosion of mediastinal adenopathy into the bronchial tree is tuberculous in origin but they can be neoplasic.

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