Bilateral diffuse multiple cavitary nodules: a radiological presentation of adenocarcinoma

The common causes of multiple cavitary lesions of lung are fungal pneumonia, pulmonary abscess, rheumatoid nodules, viral pneumonia, tuberculosis, and septic emboli. The cavitary lesions are seen in nearly 20% of lung cancers with most commonly squamous cell carcinoma. We present an adenocarcinoma o...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Egyptian journal of chest diseases and tuberculosis Vol. 74; no. 1; pp. 124 - 127
Main Authors: Spalgais, Sonam, Mathew, Libin, Mrigpuri, Parul, Kulshrestha, Ritu, Kumar, Raj
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: India Wolters Kluwer - Medknow 2025
Medknow Publications and Media Pvt. Ltd
Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
Edition:3
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ISSN:0422-7638, 2090-9950
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Summary:The common causes of multiple cavitary lesions of lung are fungal pneumonia, pulmonary abscess, rheumatoid nodules, viral pneumonia, tuberculosis, and septic emboli. The cavitary lesions are seen in nearly 20% of lung cancers with most commonly squamous cell carcinoma. We present an adenocarcinoma of lung with bilateral cavitory lesion presenting as cough, breathlessness, and chest pain for 2 months. The cavitary lung lesions have multiple differential diagnosis and are difficult to differentiate on computed tomography findings. All cavitary lung diseases should be investigated with invasive procedure like bronchoscopy to confirm the diagnosis before empirical treatment.
ISSN:0422-7638
2090-9950
DOI:10.4103/ecdt.ecdt_59_23