We describe a 32-year-old woman suspected of having pulmonary tuberculosis due to abnormal shadows found on her chest x-ray in a community health examination in September 2002. However, she consistently refused further examinations and treatment. In January 2005, she complained of a cough and sputum, by October she developed diarrhea, and by December a sore throat and fever. She was admitted to our hospital on January 23, 2006. Her chest radiograph revealed multiple thin-walled cystic lesions and infiltrative shadows in both upper lobes of the lung, a giant thin-walled cystic lesion in the superior segment of the left lower lobe, and diffuse particulate shadows. Since acid-fast staining of her sputum smear and a PCR test to detect tubercle bacilli both were positive, a diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis was made and we treated her with antituberculotic agents. Ten days after starting the treatment, her cystic lesions decreased or disappeared. Although she was seemingly healthy, her pulmonary tuberculosis became more severe since she failed to follow her treatment regimen. She therefore developed nutritional disorders and cellular immunity dysfunction that induced a sequence of changes, e.g. poor granuloma formation, excaration of caseous necrofic material by draining bronchi, and a check-valve mechanism. We speculate that these symptoms caused the formation of pneumatoceles. To our knowledge, this is the first case of pneumatocele formation found in a patient with pulmonary tuberculosis reported in Japan.

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