• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: A Case of Eosinophilic Pneumonia Successfully Treated with Suplatast Tosilate Alone
  • Contributor: Watanabe, Naoto; Hirata, Akira; Makino, Sohei; Fukuda, Takeshi
  • imprint: S. Karger AG, 2009
  • Published in: International Archives of Allergy and Immunology
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1159/000211380
  • ISSN: 1018-2438; 1423-0097
  • Keywords: Immunology ; General Medicine ; Immunology and Allergy
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <jats:p>We report a case of eosinophilic pneumonia that was successfully treated with suplatast tosilate. A 72-year-old woman with hypertension and diabetes, who did not smoke and did not have pets, consulted a physician with the chief complaints of cough, sputum, and slight fever. Chest X-ray films revealed a permeation shadow in the bilateral upper lobes. She visited a hospital because her symptoms did not improve. Pulmonary tuberculosis was suspected because of an elevated inflammatory reaction, and anti-tuberculosis treatment was started. Afterwards, eosinophilia appeared in the peripheral blood. Although daily drugs (nicardipine hydrochloride, pentoxifylline, and ticlopidine hydrochloride) were stopped, eosinophilia did not improve and was detected in a sputum sample. She was diagnosed with pulmonary infiltration with eosinophilia syndrome and hospitalized. Physical examination revealed neither rhonchus nor cardiac murmurs on auscultation. Laboratory findings showed a leukocyte count of 21,300/μl, with eosinophils accounting for 66.3% of cells. A diagnosis of eosinophilic pneumonia was made after a lung biopsy specimen was examined under a bronchial fiberscope. After suspension of anti-tuberculosis drugs and administration of suplatast tosilate 300 mg/day for 4 weeks, symptoms subsided, eosinophilia improved to within normal ranges, eosinophils in sputum disappeared, and the permeation shadow disappeared on chest X-ray films.</jats:p>