Successful Avoidance of Cicatricial Tracheobronchial Stenosis in a Patient With Endobronchial Tuberculosis by Early Administration of Systemic High-Dose Corticosteroids: A Case Report
Masami Yamazoe, Kento Furukawa, Kanami Nagano, Kazuya Takeda, Yutaro Nagano

TL;DR
A patient with endobronchial tuberculosis avoided severe airway scarring through early use of high-dose corticosteroids.
Contribution
Demonstrates that early high-dose corticosteroids may prevent cicatricial stenosis in endobronchial tuberculosis.
Findings
High-dose methylprednisolone reduced severe respiratory symptoms in a patient with endobronchial tuberculosis.
Early corticosteroid administration prevented cicatricial tracheobronchial stenosis in the patient.
Combination of anti-tuberculosis therapy and corticosteroids showed effective clinical outcomes.
Abstract
A 63-year-old Japanese woman was referred to our hospital due to dry cough, fever, hoarseness, stridor, and difficulty breathing. Chest computed tomography showed circumferential wall thickening in the trachea, carina, right main bronchus, and right upper lobe bronchus, and granular and nodular shadows in right S2. Flexible laryngofiberscopy showed yellowish dry respiratory secretions adhering to the subglottis. Bronchoscopic findings showed that the tracheobronchial mucosa was swollen, hyperemic, and covered with yellowish-white, cheese-like materials, and ulcerative lesions with white coatings were observed from the subglottis to the trachea, carina, right main bronchus, and right upper lobe bronchus. A diagnosis of endobronchial tuberculosis (EBTB) was confirmed by polymerase chain reaction testing, and cultures were positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis. In addition to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTracheal and airway disorders · Medical Imaging and Pathology Studies · Infectious Diseases and Tuberculosis
