• Chest · Nov 2015

    Case Reports

    A 66-Year-Old Man With a Past History of Relapsing Polychondritis Presented With Right Upper Lobe Consolidation, Nodular Airway Lesions, and a Corticosteroid-Responsive Chronic Cough.

    • Carlos D Martínez-Balzano, Andres Sosa, Sean O'Reilly, Yuna Gong, and Richard Irwin.
    • Chest. 2015 Nov 1;148(5):e142-7.

    AbstractA 66-year-old male nonsmoker from Arizona was referred to our practice for evaluation of chronic cough. He had a history of biopsy-proven relapsing polychondritis manifesting as right auricular and nasal pain and swelling 9 months prior to presentation. The onset of his cough coincided with the diagnosis of relapsing polychondritis, and he was prescribed prednisone 90 mg/d, which promptly relieved his rheumatologic and respiratory symptoms. A chest radiograph, obtained prior to the initiation of therapy, was normal. Any attempts at decreasing the dose of the glucocorticoid to < 30 mg/d resulted in recurrence of the cough but not of the auricular or nasal symptoms. A second chest radiograph done 6 months before presentation, while the patient was receiving prednisone 20 mg/d, was normal as well. In anticipation of our evaluation, he stopped all glucocorticoids for 7 days. He was not receiving any other medications, and he had no history of an atopic diathesis.

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