Internal medicine
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High-altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE) is a life-threatening, noncardiogenic pulmonary edema that occurs in unacclimatized individuals rapidly ascending to high altitudes above 2,500 m above sea level. Until the entity of HAPE was first identified in a case report published in Japan in 1966, the symptoms of severe dyspnea or coma occurring in climbers of the Japan Alps were incorrectly attributed to pneumonia or congestive heart failure. ⋯ Over the past 50 years, a series of studies have been conducted at Shinshu University to gain a better understanding of the characteristics of HAPE. This review summarizes the major achievements of these studies, including their clinical features, management, and pathogenesis of HAPE, particularly in the Japanese population.
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A 78-year-old woman with a history of intractable otitis media presented with a fever, hearing impairment, thigh pain, and a skin rash. She had renal dysfunction, positive myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibody, otitis media, and multiple nodules in both lungs. ⋯ Induction therapy with rituximab and avacopan without glucocorticoids promptly resolved her fever and thigh pain and improved her auditory acuity and nodule in the right lung. The patient experienced no adverse effects with rituximab or avacopan.
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We herein report a case of Mycobacterium interjectum pulmonary disease (M. interjectum-PD) that improved considerably after azithromycin (AZM), rifampicin (RFP), and ethambutol (EB) therapy. A 69-year-old woman, managed locally for suspected NTM-PD based on chest computed tomography (CT) findings was referred to our hospital for worsening productive cough six years after the initial diagnosis. ⋯ Treatment with AZM, RFP, and EB resulted in sputum culture conversion, and the chest CT findings subsequently improved. This is the first reported case of M. interjectum-PD in Japan.