Pulmonary Schistosomiasis – Imaging Features

Authors

  • Tilo Niemann
  • Hans Peter Marti
  • Sjunne Hans Duhnsen
  • Georg Bongartz

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3941/jrcr.v4i9.482

Keywords:

schistosomiasis, lung disease, parasitic, computed tomography

Abstract

Schistosomiasis is a helminthic infection that is endemic in tropical and subtropical regions. Pulmonary involvement can be divided into two categories: acute or chronic compromise. Chronic and recurrent infection develops in persons living or travelling in endemic areas. In the lungs, granuloma formation and fibrosis around the schistosome eggs retained in the pulmonary vasculature may result in obliterative arteriolitis and pulmonary hypertension leading to cor pulmonale. Acute schistosomiasis is associated with primary exposure and is commonly seen in nonimmune travelers. The common CT findings in acute pulmonary schistosomiasis are small pulmonary nodules ranging from 2 to 15 mm and larger nodules with ground glass-opacity halo. Katayama fever is a severe clinical manifestation of acute involvement. We present a case of pulmonary involvement in schistosomiasis and provide a discussion about typical imaging findings in the acute and chronic form.

Published

2010-09-01

Issue

Section

Thoracic Radiology