Intractable cough due to endobronchial chondroma

Publication date: Available online 14 November 2019Source: Respiratory Medicine Case ReportsAuthor(s): Talha Mahmud, Muhammad Saqib, Zanobia Nasim Butt, Saira FatimaAbstractA 62-year-old man, suffering from bronchial asthma was evaluated due to intractable cough. His dyspnea was controlled but cough remained unresponsive to escalation of asthma management steps. Cough occurred in bouts especially during night time and was occasionally productive of mucoid sputum. Other than bilateral rhonchi on chest auscultation, remaining systemic examination was unremarkable. CT chest showed a mass lesion in the bronchus intermedius that was confirmed on bronchoscopy and was removed after electrocautery snare excision. Histopathology of the lesion was consistent with endobronchial chondroma. The patient experienced a dramatic resolution of cough post tumor removal. Follow up bronchoscopy after 24 months revealed no tumor recurrence.
Source: Respiratory Medicine Case Reports - Category: Respiratory Medicine Source Type: research