An unusual course of disease in two patients with COVID-19: pulmonary cavitation
Michael Muheim, Fabio José Weber, Patrick Muggensturm, Eva Seiler
BMJ Case Reports · 2020-09
Abstract
Two 59-year-old male patients with COVID-19 pneumonia developed pulmonary cavitation with air-fluid level, accompanied by right-sided chest pain several weeks after first onset of symptoms. Considering a possible bacterial abscess formation, both patients were started on antibiotics. No microbiological pathogen was detected in further investigations (sputum analysis, bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage and CT-guided drainage of the cavitation). Histopathological analysis of the drained fluid was non-specific, and the aetiology remained not fully understood. We report pulmonary cavitation as a rare finding in late stage COVID-19 pneumonia. As both our patients presented with localised chest pain prior to detection of the lesions, new onset of this symptom should warrant further investigation.
MeSH terms
- Bronchoalveolar lavage
- Medicine
- Pneumonia
- Sputum
- Etiology
- Bronchoscopy
- Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
- Chest pain
- Radiology
- Pathology
- Disease
- Lung
- Internal medicine