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History. 67 yr old man, former smoker, with h/o stage I poorly differentiated NSCLC s/p RML resection in 1996.He is followed with annual surveillance chest CT's which have all been negative. However, in May 2002 he has an abnormal CT.Denies cough, CP, SOB, F, C, NS or wt loss. PMHx:CAD s/p PTCA
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1. Tuesday Case Conference
2. History 67 yr old man, former smoker, with h/o stage I poorly differentiated NSCLC s/p RML resection in 1996.
He is followed with annual surveillance chest CTs which have all been negative. However, in May 2002 he has an abnormal CT.
Denies cough, CP, SOB, F, C, NS or wt loss
3. PMHx:
CAD s/p PTCA with stent
Pneumonia in 2/2002
Hyperlipidemia
HTN
Medications:
ASA
Prinivil
Pravachol
Metoprolol
4. Labs:
13.7 52% PMNs
4.3 293
41.4
139 102 14
4.3 25 0.9
LFTs normal
Coags normal Exam:
T98.7 BP167/78 P65 RR16 100% on RA 71 kg
Gen: NAD A+Ox3
HEENT: WNL
No palpable LN
CV: RRR no M/G/R
Lungs: CTA bilat
Abd: SNTND, nl BS
Ext: No CCE
Neuro: WNL
7. CT report:
Precarinal lymph node, enlarged since prior study, measuring 1.9 x 2.4 cm.
8. CT report:
Precarinal lymph node, enlarged since prior study, measuring 1.9 x 2.4 cm.
Differential Diagnosis?
Next step?
10. CT report:
Slight interval increase in size of precarinal lymph node, now measuring 2.2 x 2.7 cm. No new mediastinal or hilar adenopathy is identified.
11. CT report:
Slight interval increase in size of precarinal lymph node, now measuring 2.2 x 2.7 cm. No new mediastinal or hilar adenopathy is identified.
PET:
Fairly intense uptake is identified within the known precarinal lymph node, otherwise negative.
17. Pulmonary Nocardiosis
18. Nocardia: Microbiology
19. Actinomycetes Anaerobic Aerobic
Actinomyces Nocardia
Arachnia Gordona
Rothia Streptomyces
Bifidobacterium Mycobacterium
Rhodococcus
Corynebacterium
Actinomadura
Dermatophilus
20. Nocardia: Species N. asteroides (80% of human infection)
N. brasiliensis
N. farcinia
N. nova
N. otitidiscaviarum
N. transvalensis
21. Nocardia: Epidemiology Nocardia is a ubiquitous soil bacteria. Nocardiosis is rare. It is estimated that there are 500 to 1000 new cases per year in the U.S.
There are several predisposing conditions, although 36% of cases had no predisposing in one series.
22. Extrapulmonary Nocardiosis
23. Pulmonary Nocardia: Clinical Presentation Symptoms are can be progress over several weeks.
Low grade fever
Weight loss
Productive cough
Hemoptysis
Fatigue
Pleuritic chest pain
24. Radiographic appearance is variable
25. Nocardia Diagnosis Several factors can make the diagnosis difficult:
Slow growth (up to 2 to 3 weeks)
Over growth of other contaminating organisms
Lack of specific clinical or radiographic characteristics
In one series 44% of patients with pulmonary nocardia required an invasive procedure to make the diagnosis (bronchoscopy, thoracentesis, thoracotomy, autopsy).
Sensitivity of invasive sample estimated at 90%. Clinically insignificant colonization of nocardia has been reported.
26. Nocardia Treatment Lack of clinical trials makes optimal treatment unclear.
Sulfonamides, especially TMP-SMZ, considered to be the drug of choice. Optimal dose unclear, most recommend 2.5-10 mg/kg of TMP and 12.5-50 mg/kg of SMZ (1 to 4 DS tabs per day).
Duration of therapy also not known. Most recommend 2 to 12 months.
27. Nocardia Treatment Alternative treatments bases on in vitro activity and anecdotal success. Informal poll of IDSA members suggests:
Severely ill:
IV amikacin, imipenem or 3rd gen cephalosporins.
Less ill:
Oral minocycline
28. Prognosis Prognosis depends on extent of disease and immune status of the patient.
For disseminated nocardiosis the mortality is 7 to 44% in immunocompetent patients; mortality is >85% in immunocompromised patients.
30. Conclusions Nocardia is a rare cause of pulmonary infection
Would consider in immunocompromised patient with subacute or chronic symptoms
CXR often shows bilateral nodules, but can present in different patterns
Optimal treatment not known, TMP-SMZ most commonly used