Two cases of Kimura's disease associated with bronchial asthma] |
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Authors: | S Ito H Kume T Kimura N Yoshida H Mizutani Y Ito R Suzuki K Yamaki |
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Affiliation: | Second Department of Internal Medicine, Nagoya University School of Medicine, Aichi, Japan. |
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Abstract: | We encountered two rare cases of Kimura's disease associated with bronchial asthma presenting eosinophilia and hyperimmunoglobulinemia E. Patient 1 was a 26-year-old man who had been admitted to our hospital with recurrent increase in left parotid mass in May 1997. He had previously undergone surgery for local excision at another hospital in September 1987; the excised specimens were re-evaluated and the diagnosis of Kimura's disease was confirmed. Because the patient was suffering from an acute asthma attack on admission, prednisolone (PSL) 30 mg/day was administered orally. PSL reduced the parotid mass and improved control of the asthma. Patient 2 was an 18 year-old man who had been given a diagnosis of Kimura's disease on the basis of histologic findings from a biopsy specimen of a subcutaneous tumor in the left cheek in 1988. Following the diagnosis, the patient was treated with methotrexate for the first several months, and then with loxioprofen for 9 years, but the size of the mass remained unchanged. Bronchial asthma developed in this patient in 1995 and had been treated with theophylline. However, because this therapy caused a deterioration of asthma control, the patient was admitted to our hospital in October 1997 for the treatment of bronchial asthma. Inhaled corticosteroids (beclometasone 0.8 mg/day) in addition to theophylline alleviated the patient's asthma symptoms and yielded improved lung function. Because few cases of Kimura's disease associated with bronchial asthma have been reported, patients with eosinophilia and hyperimmunoglobulinemia E were not necessarily considered at high risk for the onset of bronchial asthma. |
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