A 57-year-old male with respiratory distress and back and chest pain was admitted to the respiratory disease clinic in September 2021. He was referred from another hospital for right-sided spontaneous pneumothorax on radiographic examination. On arrival, he was tachypneic, and laboratory studies showed leukocytosis (32 × 103 µL) and an elevated level of C-reactive protein (214 mg/L). Computed tomography (CT) of the thorax revealed right-sided pneumothorax and bilateral peripherally distributed multiple nodules with cavitation (Figures 1-2). Antibiotics were started and a chest tube was inserted. Blood cultures were negative, but the bronchial lavage culture revealed Staphylococcus aureus. The biopsy of the lung nodules showed lymphoplasmacytic infiltration and inflammation. A week after admission, the patient complained of leg numbness. Lumbar magnetic resonance imaging revealed spondylodiscitis of L3-4 and S1 (Figure 3). After 6 weeks of treatment with levofloxacin, the pulmonary lesions regressed. The patient refused surgery for spondylodiscitis.
FIGURE 1: Coronal reformatted chest CT shows peripherally distributed nodules with or without cavitation (open yellow arrows).

FIGURE 2: Axial chest CT shows cavitary subpleural nodules (open yellow arrows) and residual pneumothorax (open red arrow).

FIGURE 3: Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted fat saturated magnetic resonance imaging shows L3-4 and S1 spondylodiscitis with epidural enhancement.

Septic pulmonary embolization is a rare condition that is difficult to diagnose due to nonspecific clinical and radiological findings. Indwelling catheters, drug abuse, and infective endocarditis are risk factors for this condition 1 . The CT appearance of septic emboli includes well-defined peripherally located nodules with or without cavitation or wedge-shaped peripheral lesions 2 . Feeding vessel signs were also observed.
Patients rarely present with spontaneous pneumothorax 3 . In patients with spondylodiscitis and peripherally distributed cavitary nodules on CT scan, septic lung emboli should be suspected.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors have no acknowledgments.
Footnotes
Financial Support: The authors received no financial support for the research and/or authorship of this article.
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