Rare Diseases Symptoms Automatic Extraction

Miliary nodules in a patient of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergilosis.

[allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis]

Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergilosis (ABPA) is immunological pulmonary disease caused by hypersensitivity of aspergillus fumigatus usually occurs in patients with chronic asthma, cystic fibrosis and bronchiactasis. This disease may present with divers radiological presentation like; fleeting pulmonary opacities, bronchiactasis, mucoid impaction, perihilar opacity (hailer lymphadenopathy), and lung mass or pleural effusion. We describe the case of a 30 year old housewife who presented with progressive dysponea, low grade fever, dry cough, weight loss and miliary nodule in chest radiograph and high-resolution CT (HRCT) in a tertiary level hospital of Bangladesh. A diagnosis of ABPA was established on the basis of sputum routine microscopy and culture examination for fungus (Aspergillus).

Diseases presenting "pleural effusion" symptom

  • allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
  • cushing syndrome
  • dedifferentiated liposarcoma
  • erdheim-chester disease
  • esophageal carcinoma
  • hydrocephalus with stenosis of the aqueduct of sylvius
  • lymphangioleiomyomatosis
  • pleomorphic liposarcoma
  • primary effusion lymphoma
  • scrub typhus
  • systemic capillary leak syndrome
  • thoracic outlet syndrome
  • waldenström macroglobulinemia
  • wolf-hirschhorn syndrome

This symptom has already been validated