Abstract

Aspiration of a foreign body occurs rarer in adults than it does in children. Advanced age and swallowing disorders, often caused by neuromuscular diseases, predispose for aspiration. Symptoms due to aspiration are mainly cough and wheezing. However, clinical and radiological symptoms may mistakenly suggest lung cancer. Making a proper diagnosis could be difficult and time consuming. In this study we report a case of a 73-year old woman who has been diagnosed and treated myasthenia gravis for 10 years. The patient manifested chronic cough for over a year, weight loss, lung lesions on chest X-ray and computed tomography images in the form of atelectasis and inflammatory infiltrations. The results of cytological tests of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid were 'atypical cells' which suggested a lung cancer. Flexible bronchoscopy set the diagnosis as a foreign body in right upper bronchus, which turned out to be a piece of a plant obstructing the bronchus. The patient came down with pneumonia. Laboratory examinations revealed leucocytosis and a high level of C-reactive protein. A complete removal of foreign body took place during rigid bronchoscopy. Concomitantly, but unrelated to the finding of a foreign body in the bronchus, the patient was diagnosed with digestive tract perforation on the basis of X-ray images, which remained otherwise asymptomatic. Explorative laparotomy revealed a perforated colonic diverticulum, which was successfully treated surgically.

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