A previously healthy 34-year-old man presented to the emergency department 1 day after being involved in a motor vehicle accident. He complained of right-sided chest pain, cough, and hemoptysis. Chest CT showed a small cavitary nodule, containing an air-fluid level and surrounded by ground-glass opacities, in the right lower lobe (Figure 1A). A diagnosis of traumatic pulmonary pseudocyst (TPP) was made. The case was managed conservatively, and there were no complications. A follow-up CT scan acquired 12 days later showed that the cystic lesion had evolved to a homogeneous nodule (Figure 1B). Another CT scan acquired three months later showed a marked reduction in the volume of the lesion.
An uncommon lesion associated with traumatic chest injury, TPP occurs as a consequence of traumatic disruption of the lung parenchyma, with subsequent filling of the traumatic intraparenchymal defect with air, blood, or both. The condition is frequently associated with pulmonary contusions.(1-3) Common symptoms include chest pain, dyspnea, cough, and hemoptysis, although some patients are asymptomatic. The most common finding on CT is a round or oval cystic structure, with or without an air-fluid level. The lesion is typically surrounded by ground-glass opacities or consolidations resulting from pulmonary contusion. The management of TPP is conservative, because the clinical course is usually benign.(1-3)
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2. Tsitouridis I, Tsinoglou K, Tsandiridis C, Papastergiou C, Bintoudi A. Traumatic pulmonary pseudocysts: CT findings. J Thorac Imaging. 2007;22(3):247-251. https://doi.org/10.1097/RTI.0b013e3180413e2a
3. Phillips B, Shaw J, Turco L, McDonald D, Carey J, Balters M, et al. Traumatic pulmonary pseudocyst: An underreported entity. Injury. 2017;48(2):214-220. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.injury.2016.12.006