Bronchial changes in airborne tularemia

Author:

Syrjälä Hannu,Sutinen Seppo,Jokinen Kalevi,Nieminen Pentti,Tuuponen Tuula,Salminen Aimo

Abstract

AbstractWe describe seven typhoidal tularemia patients without ulcers or lymphadenopa-thy, who underwent diagnostic bronchoscopy. Four patients had had obvious airborne exposure toF. tularensisduring farming activities, and the remaining three had respiratory symptoms also. Bronchoscopical findings were pathological in all cases, varying from local to diffuse haemorrhagic inflammation; in one case a granulomatous tumour was seen. Early histopathological changes in three biopsies consisted of haemorrhagic oedema progressing to a non-specific inflammatory reaction, which could still be found 45 days after the onset of symptoms. Granulomatous inflammation, indistinguishable from tuberculosis or sarcoidosis, was seen in four biopsies from two patients, three to seven months after the onset. Most patients had radiographic hilar enlargement. We conclude that transmission of typhoid tularemia usually occurs through inhalation leading to bronchial changes, which correspond skin ulcerations in ulcero-glandular tularemia, the hilar enlargement corresponding to the lymph node component. We emphasize that usage of the term ‘typhoidal’ tularemia should be discontinued. Instead, tularemia transmitted through inhalation should be called pulmonary or respiratory.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,General Medicine

Reference21 articles.

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2. Aerosol infection of man with Pasteurella tularensis;McCrumb;Bacterial Reviews,1961

3. Isolation of Francisella tularensis from infected frozen human blood;Pittman;Journal of Clinical Microbiology,1977

4. Histopathology of human lymph node tularemia caused by F. tularensis var pataelarctica;Sutinen;Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine,1986

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