Abstract

Whipple's disease is often accompanied by a long, preintestinal phase of vague symptoms, such as weight loss, fever, and migratory arthralgia, which may delay diagnosis and proper treatment. We report a patient who presented with sarcoidlike granulomas in the lung 1.5 yr before the development of gastrointestinal symptoms. He was treated with prednisone and his lung lesions improved dramatically. However, steroids could not be discontinued until the diagnosis of Whipple's disease was made and he was started on antibiotic treatment. Whippie's disease was diagnosed from a small intestinal biopsy specimen by electron microscopic demonstration of characteristic bacillary bodies. Liver biopsy specimens also demonstrated a few Kupffer cells containing degenerative bacillary bodies. Based on this case and other reported cases of Whipple's disease with sarcoidlike lesions in various organs, we suggest that sarcoidlike tissue reaction can be an early manifestation of Whipple's disease, recognition of which may have practical value in facilitating an early diagnosis and treatment.

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