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METHODS
A 47-year-old man who was a redo double lung transplant recipient (cytomegalovirus [CMV] status: donor positive/recipient positive; Epstein-Barr virus status: donor positive/recipient positive) presented to the hospital with 1 week of generalized malaise, low-grade fevers, and dry cough. His
A 68-year-old man who had worked as a stone mason for more than 50 years with a heavy smoking history consulted our clinic with symptoms of cough, low grade fever, weightloss, malaise and a single expectoration of hemo-sputum. He had been diagnosed as silicosis by the mass survey 5 years ago based
A 60-year-old stonemason, suffering for many years from joint pains and exertional dyspnoea, developed a high fever with weight loss. Physical examination revealed reddening of light-exposed skin areas, fine rales and overly warm and reddened hand and knee joints. Abnormal laboratory findings were
A 20-yr-old woman with no history of pulmonary disease presented with acute dyspnea and fever. After various investigations and treatments the symptoms persisted and a lung biopsy was performed. Pathologic analysis disclosed the presence of silicotic crystals within lung tissue and mediastinal lymph
A 73-year-old man with a clinical diagnosis of pulmonary silicosis (long-standing exposure to silica, pulmonary infiltrates, and flu-like symptoms) presented to the emergency room with fever, acute biliary colic, and cholelithiasis. The patient had a 2-year status postchemotherapy with complete
Sandblasting is one of the occupational causes of silicosis. This report details three cases diagnosed as silicosis caused by sandblasting in Teflon-coated pan manufacturing: Case 1--A 24-year-old man admitted with dyspnea and cough; Case 2--An 18-year-old man admitted with shortness of breath and
We reported two cases of silicosis exhibiting MPO-ANCA associated disorder. Case 1 was a 69 year-old man with silicosis and chronic interstitial pneumonia. He was admitted because of fever, dry cough, left chest pain, dyspnea and body weight loss. He was diagnosed as acute exacerbation of
A 74-year-old man with silicosis was admitted to the hospital because of prolonged fever. After referral to internal medicine for persistent fever and renal dysfunction, workup revealed antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) positivity. He was diagnosed with microscopic polyangiitis (MPA).
Chronic necrotising pulmonary aspergillosis (CNPA) is a rare complication of silicosis whose diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion as it mimics tuberculosis. We report a case of a 52-year-old male with a long history of silica dust exposure and progressively increasing dyspnoea for the past
METHODS
About 10 weeks before admission to hospital a 73-year-old woman developed a fever of up to 40 degrees C for three days. She then had subfebrile temperature for several weeks with some rises to 39 degrees C. She was known to have type II a diabetes mellitus and pulmonary silicosis, having
A 76-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of increasing size of lung nodules, while he was under observation for silicosis at another hospital. As the result of bronchoscopic biopsy, it was confirmed that they were silicotic nodules. However, he was hospitalized again about one month
A case of acute silicosis due to intentional inhalation of the scouring powder Ajax in a female patient suffering a sickle-cell trait (30% of S haemoglobin) is reported. It consisted of an acute immuno-allergic pneumonitis with fever and a respiratory distress syndrome. It was associated with a
Though metals represent the largest group of elements they rather rarely cause respiratory diseases. This article will therefore review the most important ones caused by inhaled dusts of metals and some of their inorganic compounds, but leaving aside silicosis and silicatosis as well as