Mucoepidermoid bronchial tumor in a child masqueradingas tuberculosis

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2024

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Abstract

Background: Endobronchial primary tumors are rare in children and are difficult to diagnose, often leading to a delay in the diagnosis. In the developing world, there are other more common causes of luminal airway obstruction and tumors are not always considered. An 11-year-old HIV-negative boy presented with a fever and cough. His condition deteriorated during the next 2 days, and he needed high-flow oxygen. On examination, there were no signs of chronic lung disease, but he had reduced chest expansion on the left, was dull to percussion over the entire left side of the chest, had markedly reduced air entry on the left, and his trachea deviated to the left. The chest X-ray at the time of admission demonstrated left basal opacity with volume loss, displacement of the cardio mediastinal shadow to the left and compensatory expansion of the right lung across the midline (Figure 1A).

Description

Keywords

3D segmentation, Bronchoscopy, Chest CT scan, Foreign body aspiration, Mucoepidermoid

Citation

Goussard, P., Gie, A., Venkatakrishna, S., Andronikou, S., Ebert, L., Verster, J., Schubert, P.T., Opperman, J. and Janson, J., 2024. Mucoepidermoid bronchial tumor in a child masquerading as tuberculosis. Pediatric Pulmonology.