Abstract

Background. Organizing pneumonia is an uncommon diffuse interstitial lung disease that affects the terminal and respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts, and alveoli. Most cases are idiopathic, but some are associated with infections. We present an uncommon case of organizing pneumonia associated with herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1). Case. A 39-year-old man with hypertension presented with dyspnea, fever, and productive cough for 2 weeks. He was treated for 5 days for acute bronchitis as an outpatient with no improvement. His examination revealed mild respiratory distress, O2 saturation 92% on room air, and right sided crackles. Labs included a white blood cell count of 19 300/µL. His chest x-ray showed bilateral infiltrates greater on the right. Bronchoalveolar lavage was positive for HSV-1; transbronchial biopsies showed focal pneumonitis with plentiful intra-alveolar macrophages. His respiratory status progressively deteriorated, and he was intubated for mechanical ventilation. He received 10 days of intravenous (IV) antibiotics and 14 days of IV acyclovir. He was readmitted 10 days later with worsening symptoms and was intubated for respiratory failure. His CT chest showed diffuse, patchy consolidation of both lungs, right more than left. Open lung biopsy showed extensive organizing pneumonia, diffuse alveolar damage, intra-alveolar macrophages, and pleural fibrosis; he was treated with IV corticosteroids. He was extubated after 10 days; within 2 weeks his chest x-ray was markedly improved. Discussion. Organizing pneumonia is usually idiopathic; infection is one of the secondary causes. To our knowledge this is only the second reported case associated with HSV. This association may have important pathogenic and therapeutic implications.

Highlights

  • Herpes simplex pneumonia occasionally occurs in immunocompetent patients

  • We report a case of herpes pneumonia in a patient with acute respiratory failure who subsequently developed organizing pneumonia

  • The diagnosis of herpes was based on the positive Direct fluorescent antibody (DFA) from bronchial washings and bronchial alveolar lavage (BAL) specimens

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Summary

Introduction

Herpes simplex pneumonia occasionally occurs in immunocompetent patients. This may develop as a primary infection or as a reactivation of latent infection during an acute illness, especially respiratory failure. The patient returned with increasing shortness of breath and bloody sputum for the previous 3 days His vital signs were as follows: blood pressure 142/91 mm Hg, heart rate 99 beats per minute, and respiratory rate 24 breaths/min. His physical examination was significant for decreased breath sounds especially on the right side and bilateral crackles with occasional wheezing. Pathology showed diffuse alveolar damage with hyaline membranes, intra-alveolar macrophages, and pleural fibrosis He was started on methylprednisolone 40 mg 4 times daily over the 14 days and his oxygenation improved. He stayed at the other hospital for 2 weeks and was continued on prednisone

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