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Respiratory Medicine Case Reports
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Case report
Azygos lobe: A rare cause of right paratracheal opacity
Jamal Akhtar
a,∗
, Amos Lal
a
, Kevin B. Martin
b
, Joel Popkin
a
a
Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Vincent Hospital, Worcester, MA, USA
b
Pulmonary Division, Reliant Medical Group, Worcester, MA, USA
ARTICLE INFO
Keywords:
Azygos lobe
Azygos fissure
Rare variant
ABSTRACT
A 55 year old male presented with a complaint of dyspnea and non productive cough. He was found to have right
paratracheal opacity on Chest X ray. Chest CT scan revealed right sided azygos lobe. An azygos lobe is a rare
congenital variant of the right lung, usually diagnosed as an incidental finding.
1. Introduction
An azygos lobe is a rare congenital variant usually of the right lung,
not a true separate lobe. It is important to have a good understanding of
the entity, as it can mimic certain pathological conditions like bullae,
abscesses or lung masses. It is also important in preparation for surgical
procedures.
2. Case report
A 55 year old male presented with a complaint of dry cough and
dyspnea. A chest x ray revealed right paratracheal opacity (Fig. 1). The
chest CT showed minor air space disease with an air bronchogram in
the left lower lobe. There was also tree in bud nodularity with scattered
subcentimeter ground glass nodules involving the left lower lobe. It also
incidentally revealed an azygos fissure along with an azygos lobe on the
right side (Fig. 2a and 2b). He was treated for pneumonia.
3. Discussion
An azygos lobe is a rare normal anatomic variant of the right upper
lobe, first described by Heinrich Wrisberg in 1778 [1]. Its prevalence
varies from 0.4% on chest radiograph to 1.2% on high resolution CT
scans. It is usually diagnosed incidentally on imaging [2]. It is typically
located in the apicomedial portion of the right lung, separated from the
rest of the right upper lobe by a visible fissure, termed an azygous
fissure. The fissure can be identified as a fine, convex line on a chest
radiograph in the para mediastinal portion of the right lung. The upper
most part of the fissure is triangular shaped and known as “triagonum
parietale” containing a small amount of areolar tissue between the
parietal layers of pleura. The lower most portion of the azygos fissure is
tear drop shaped and contains the azygos vein [3].
The azygos vein is normally formed by the union of the right sub-
costal vein and the right ascending lumbar vein at the level of the L1/L2
vertebrae. It enters through the diaphragmatic aortic hiatus into the
thoracic cavity, ascends along the anterolateral surface of the thoracic
vertebrae, takes a curve at T4 and then joins the superior vena cava.
The azygos vein arch appears as a tear drop on x ray and is normally
located at the caudal point of the right paratracheal stripe, at the right
tracheobronchial angle. The azygos lobe is formed when the right
posterior cardinal vein, which is one of the precursors of the azygos
vein penetrates the right lung apex, rather than migrating over it. The
cardinal vein carries both pleural layers with it, resulting in entrapment
of a portion of the right upper lobe. The double folds of visceral and
parietal pleura form a mesentery like structure, termed the mesoaygos
or azygos fissure, containing the azygos vein arch in its lower most
portion [4].
The azygos lobe is not truly a separate lobe, as it does not have its
own bronchus and does not correspond to a specific bronchopulmonary
segment. Embryologically the azygos lobe is a part of the right upper
lobe and its bronchial and arterial supplies arise from the apical or
posterior segments of the right upper lobe [5,6]. Left azygos lobe has
been reported as well, but it is extremely rare [7,8].
Understanding the structure of the azygos lobe is important. It can
mimic bullae, abscesses or a paratracheal opacity [9,10]. Sometimes the
azygos vein located in the lower most part of azygous fissure can mimic
a pulmonary nodule [3]. Consolidation of the azygos lobe can mimic a
lung mass [3]. For thoracoscopic procedures, recognition of the azygos
lobe is particularly important as partial obstruction of surgical site view
during thoracoscopic sympathectomy has been reported by Smith et al.
[11]. Two cases were reported by Bancroft et al. where the phrenic
nerve was coursing within the azygos fissure [12]. The azygos fissure or
pleural folds helps in preventing dissemination of the infection to the
azygos lobe from adjacent parts of the lung. However, multiple cases of
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rmcr.2018.02.001
Received 16 December 2017; Received in revised form 1 February 2018; Accepted 1 February 2018
∗
Corresponding author. Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Vincent Hospital, Worcester, MA, USA.
E-mail address: jamal.akhtar@stvincenthospital.com (J. Akhtar).
Respiratory Medicine Case Reports 23 (2018) 136–137
2213-0071/ © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/BY-NC-ND/4.0/).
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