Symptoms of pulmonary involvement can be shortness of breath, cough and painful breathing (pleurisy).
Nodules, consolidations, cavities and ground glass lesions are common in patients with pulmonary involvement.
For patients with pulmonary involvement, the most serious complication of this syndrome is pulmonary fibrosis and subsequent pulmonary hypertension.
Symptoms of pulmonary involvement can be shortness of breath, cough and painful breathing (pleuritic chest pain).
For patients with either diffuse pulmonary involvement or severely ill patients with extrathoracic disseminated disease, amphotericin B is the preferred initial therapy (AII) (636).
People with Hunter syndrome may also have limited lung capacity due to pulmonary involvement.
The course and severity of the pulmonary involvement does not seem to be related to the activity of the intestinal disease.
The condition of marked eosinophilia with pulmonary involvement was first termed tropical pulmonary eosinophilia in 1950.
It can be sight-threatening, and death can occasionally occur from pulmonary involvement.
Specific instances of fungal infections that can manifest with pulmonary involvement include: