Post-Covid-19 Immunological Disorder: A Possible Pathological Entity in a 43 Year Old Man
Published Online: Jul 13, 2022
Page range: 77 - 94
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/inmed-2022-0210
Keywords
© 2022 Gabriel Scarlat et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
Although blood cultures and other microbiological tests were negative for an infectious process, a chest X-ray was performed, which detected the presence of a nodular formation in the superior left lung lobe. Several differential diagnoses were taken into consideration, including pulmonary sarcoidosis and granulomatosis with polyangiitis, both of which were excluded, clinically and biologically.
A thoracic computed tomography (CT) was later performed, which revealed the presence of a tumoral nodule in the left lung, associated with multiple mediastinal and supraclavicular lymphadenopathies, indicative of lung cancer. However, lung cancer was also excluded upon the histopathological examination of paratracheal lymphnodes, which detected multiple areas of parenchymal necrosis surrounded by dense inflammatory infiltrates, formed predominantly by histiocytes. All of these findings resulted in the diagnosis of a post-COVID-19 rheumatoid syndrome, the only therapeutic strategy being the administration of high doses of intravenous and oral methylprednisolone, which improved the patient’s health.