Histopathology
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The structure of bronchial plugs was examined in 12 lobectomy specimens from patients with bronchocentric granulomatosis and mucoid impaction, two bronchial biopsies from patients with mucoid impaction, sections from one post-mortem showing evidence of mucoid impaction and bronchocentric granulomatosis as well as aspergilloma with tissue invasion and from post-mortems on eight patients who had died during a persisting exacerbation of their asthma. In both mucoid impaction and asthma eosinophils were arranged in layers within the mucus, but the pattern of lamination was different in the two groups. In asthma the layers of eosinophils appeared as whorls and eddies. ⋯ The histological appearance of even small fragments of such plugs is diagnostic of allergic bronchopulmonary fungal disease with mucoid impaction. In all our cases bronchocentric granulomatosis appears to have been a complication of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis with mucoid impaction. The clusters of inspissated eosinophils so typical of the peripheral lesion of bronchocentric granulomatosis appear to be fragments of the mucus plugs formed in the larger bronchi.