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pulmonary infiltrates with eosinophilia (PIE) syndrome

A group of heterogenous disorders characterized by the presence of abnormalities on chest X-ray & eosinophilia. Etiology: 1) asthma 2) pulmonary eosinophilia 3) allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis 4) eosinophilic pneumonia a) acute eosinophilic pneumonia b) chronic eosinophilic pneumonia 5) Churg-Strauss disease 6) parasitic infections - Loffler syndrome 7) pharmaceutical agents 8) neoplasms associated with eosinophilia: a) eosinophilic leukemia b) adenocarcinoma of the lung c) lymphoma 9) tropical eosinophilia 10) hypereosinophilic syndrome 11) bronchocentric granulomatosis Epidemiology: - travel to developing country Clinical manifestations: - low grade fever - dry cough - wheezing Laboratory: - stool for ova & parasites Radiology: - patchy bilateral pulmonary infiltrates Management: - long-term systemic glucocorticoids - case of symptoms & radiology findings clearing with 5 days of prednisone [2]

Related

eosinophilia parasites frequently associated with eosinophilia

Specific

acute eosinophilic leukemia allergic angiitis & granulomatosis of Churg-Strauss; eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA) allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis; allergic bronchopulmonary mycosis (ABPA) bronchocentric granulomatosis drugs causing eosinophilia eosinophilic asthma eosinophilic pneumonia; Andrews syndrome; pulmonary eosinophilia hypereosinophilic syndrome Loffler's syndrome (simple pulmonary eosinophilia) tropical eosinophilia

General

pulmonary infiltrate pulmonary esosinophilia syndrome

References

  1. Mayo Internal Medicine Board Review, 1998-99, Prakash UBS (ed) Lippincott-Raven, Philadelphia, 1998, pg 753
  2. NEJM Knowledge+ Complex Medical Care