Table 8
Radiographic Findings
Pathogen
Chest radiographic findings
Comments and other radiologic findings
Category A pathogens
Anthrax (
B. anthracis
)
Inhalation anthrax (36)]
Radiographic findings
(comparing inhalational anthrax and
CAP)
Inhalational anthrax (
N
¼
22)
CAP (
N
¼
188)
Mediastinal widening only
9.1%
1.1%
Pleural effusion only
0%
0%
Infiltrate* only (*
¼
focal density, opacity, or consolidation)
0%
41.5%%
Mediastinal widening and pleural effusion
18.2%
1.1%
Mediastinal widening and infiltrate*
9.1%
4.3%
Pleural effusion and infiltrate*
18.2%
19.1%
Mediastinal widening, pleural effusion, and infiltrate*
45.5%
1.6%
Nonspecific findings
0%
15.4%
Normal
0%
14.9%
Botulism (
C. botulinum
toxin)
Pneumonia complicating fatal cases. Aspiration pneumonia.
Plague (
Y. pestis
)
10% of patients with bubonic plague develop secondary
pneumonia.
Extensive bilateral secondary opacities cannot be distinguished
from primary plague pneumonia or acute respiratory distresssyndrome.
Pneumonic plague from inhalation
has a 4-day incubation period.
In septicemic plague, bilateral infiltrates may represent
secondary plague pneumonia or diffuse alveolar damagefrom sepsis.
Mediastinal, cervical, and hilar adenopathy may not be
consistently present in bubonic and secondary pneumonicplague.
Secondary plague pneumonia appears as bilateral
parenchymal infiltrates that may be initially nodular.Cavitation occurs but is uncommon.
Also described a multilobar air-space disease without extensive
hilar or mediastinal node enlargement.
Pneumonic plague is caused either by hematogenous
disease or direct inhalation.
Smallpox (
V. major
)
Viral and/or bacterial pneumonia has been reported in some
patients.
The skin rash usually appears before pulmonary disease, thus
the diagnosis is almost never in doubt.
Pulmonary edema is a common complication of flat and
hemorrhagic smallpox.
Bones and joints may become involved with periostitis of the
diaphyses of long bones, and patchy destruction of themetaphyses involving the joints (especially the elbow).
“Smallpox handlers disease”
(incubation: 9–12 days aftercontact)
Patients present 9–12 days with fever. Radiographs show ill-
defined nodular opacities in the upper lung fields that maypersist for months. These nodules calcify after severalyears.
Occurs in vaccinated patients who are in contact with smallpox
patients, especially health care workers.
460 Cleri et al.