A Retrospective Evaluation of Congenital Lung Malformation

 

Maryam Hassanzad; Soheila Khalilzadeh; Mohammad Reza Boloursaz; Sabereh Tashayoie Nejad; Seyed Amir Mohajerani; Nooshin Baghaie; Ali Akbar Velayati

Pediatric Respiratory Diseases Research Centre, NRITLD, Masih Daneshvari Hospital, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran

Background: Congenital lung malformation (CLM) is a rare condition with high incidence of mortality and morbidity. CLM is often discovered incidentally on routine prenatal ultrasound or other postnatal imaging tests. Depending on the size of lesion and degree of functional impairment, prognosis is different. Today, fetal lung abnormalities are increasingly detected prenatally by ultrasound imaging.

Objectives: This study aimed to evaluate the CLM cases in pediatric pulmonary ward of Masih Daneshvari Hospital during an 8-year period from 2002 to 2010.

Materials and Methods: In a retrospective study, 21 patients (12 females, nine males), diagnosed with CLM, were enrolled. The mean age of participants was 7.3 years (ranging from 1 month to 16 years). All patients were histopathologically diagnosed with CLM and their demographic data including age, sex, and clinical signs and symptoms were recorded. To confirm the diagnoses and rule out the differentials, patients underwent bronchoscopy, angiography and other proper diagnostic procedures. Afterwards, they were divided into several subgroups based on the malformation and type of involvement, including agenesia, hypoplasia, aplasia, bronchogenic cyst, and sequestration.

Results: We reported two agenesis, five hypoplasia, six aplasia, two bronchogenic cyst, and six sequestration cases. All patients were symptomatic at the time of diagnostic workup. The most common clinical signs and symptoms were respiratory distress and recurrent pulmonary infections.

Conclusions: Considering the wide range of clinical manifestations from no clinical symptom to severe respiratory distress at birth, imaging including chest X-ray, CT scan with contrast and MRI are of great values for early diagnosis of CLM. Early diagnosis could provide a more appropriate timing of evaluation and treatment options, lower mortality and morbidity, and better prognosis.
Keywords: Cystic Lung Malformation, Congenital; Child; Imaging

 

Download ZIP Download PDF J Compr Ped. 2014 February; 5(1): e8494.

 

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