this post was submitted on 13 Jul 2023
25 points (100.0% liked)

Radiology

596 readers
1 users here now

A community for all things related to medical imaging!

RULES:

-1. Please follow the Lemmy.World Server Rules.

-1A. Please be civil.

-1B. Please be respectful when discussing medical cases. While we do not wish to impose a somber tone upon this community, please remember that there are real patients behind the images.

-2. No patient-identifiable information. There is zero tolerance for breaching patient confidentiality laws. De-identified information is allowed under HIPAA, the US patient confidentiality law. Consent is not required when posting de-identified information.

-3. No requests for medical advice or second opinions. Please go to your physician/provider for assistance. Online strangers will never know your clinical history as well as your actual healthcare team, nor will the images posted here be of sufficient quality or completeness for diagnostic interpretation. Any content or discussions in this Community should be considered for educational purposes only, and their accuracy or quality with regards to standard of care cannot be guaranteed.

-4. No spam or advertising. Products or companies that are mentioned as a natural course of discussion are allowed.

-5. Please do not spread misinformation.

-6. Moderators have final say in their decisions. Please, no rules lawyering.

Posts:

Only moderators may post in this community pending Lemmy's implementation of a moderator-approval process. Until that happens, you may post general comments or questions in the stickied megathread. You may also request the moderators to post on your behalf via DM, pending time and availability.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

This is an absolutely insane case that made the NEJM rounds a couple years ago now. I wish this was mine. I don't think there's been another case report like it since.

41 year old Colombian male with HIV-AIDS (not adherent to treatment), tapeworm infection, with several months of fever, cough, fatigue, and weight loss.

Top left: Chest x-ray shows multiple round lung masses.

Top right: Chest CT shows those round lung masses. Look like metastases.

Bottom left: The tumors taken out.

Bottom right: Pathology of the tumors.

The patient underwent empiric treatment for tapeworm and HIV with progression of masses. The CDC was contacted for help when treatment wasn't working.

The tumor cells clearly looked like cancer but were too small to be human cells. Genetic sequencing ultimately showed tapeworm DNA, with mutations and genetic rearrangements compatible with cancer.

Final diagnosis: Metastatic tapeworm cancer, likely developed because the patient had no immune system from the HIV-AIDS.

The patient passed away a few days after the diagnosis was finally made.

top 4 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] phx 6 points 2 years ago

This is both amazing and horrific...

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 years ago

that's crazy

[–] Bristlecone 4 points 2 years ago

Jesus, how ghastly!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

New fear unlocked: tapeworm cancer