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1.
Rev. am. med. respir ; 21(4): 348-353, dic. 2021. graf
Article in English | LILACS, BINACIS | ID: biblio-1431459

ABSTRACT

Abstract COVID-19 pneumonia generates both immediate damage due to the viral effects and distant damage due to inflammatory immune deregulation. Systemic corticosteroid therapy has proven to be beneficial in the first part of the process, but its usefulness in post-acute damage is still unclear. The number of affected patients makes it imperative to find a treatment that reduces potential pulmonary sequelae. This series of cases included 18 patients admitted to polyvalent private medical institutions of Buenos Aires City: 15 were male and 3 were female; age 58.4 ± 13.6 years. History of most common comorbidities: AHT (4 patients), obesity (6 patients) and smoking (4 patients). Five patients had no medical history. All patients showed dyspnea, oxygen desaturation, and persistent or progressive tomo graphic abnormalities 14 days after their infection. All of them received dexamethasone according to current regulations. Subsequently, given the poor evolution, they were administered oral and/or intravenous corticosteroids with the same treatment used for secondary organizing pneumonia (OP). A transbronchial biopsy was performed in 6 of the patients, showing an OP pattern in 3 of them. Four weeks after the beginning of the treatment, all of the patients showed clinical improvement expressed by decreased dyspnea and the fact that they didn't require oxygen anymore and that all chest tomographies showed clearly reduced pulmonary parenchymal involve ment. Systemic corticosteroids administered in the post-acute period of COVID-19 have a clinical and radiological beneficial effect.


Subject(s)
Pneumonia , Adrenal Cortex Hormones , COVID-19 , Organizing Pneumonia
2.
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine ; : 117-123, 2008.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-11326

ABSTRACT

Dermatomyositis is characterized by progressive, symmetric, proximal muscle weakness and a nonsuppurative inflammatory myopathy of unknown etiology involving predominantly skeletal muscles. It is also characterized by typical skin lesions. Interstitial lung disease has a poor prognosis when it is associated with dermatomyositis. Organizing pneumonia is a disease in which granulation tissue fills the lumina of terminal and respiratory bronchioles and extends into the distal airspaces. The cryptogenic nature of the process is appreciated in that organizing pneumonia patterns of injury can be seen in secondary forms of the disease (secondary organizing pneumonia). Organizing pneumonia has been reported to occur in 5~10% in dermatomyositis-polymyositis patients. Anti-histidyl tRNA synthetase antibody (anti-Jo-1) is a predictive disease marker that is reported to occur in up to 70% of patients. We describe a 49-year-old male dermatomyositis patient who presented with organizing pneumonia and was found to have negative anti-Jo-1 antibody.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Amino Acyl-tRNA Synthetases , Bronchioles , Dermatomyositis , Granulation Tissue , Lung Diseases, Interstitial , Muscle Weakness , Muscle, Skeletal , Myositis , Pneumonia , Prognosis , Skin
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