Serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity in patients with histoplasmosis
K. W. Ryder, S. J. Jay, S. O. Kiblawi and M. T. Hull
The association between increased serum angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE)
activity and active sarcoidosis is well documented. During a recent
outbreak of acute histoplasmosis, a disease that shares many of the
clinical and roentgenographic features of sarcoidosis, we examined serum
ACE activity. Twenty-one (25%) of 86 patients with histoplasmosis had
increased serum ACE activity. There were neither roentgenographic nor other
substantive clinical differences between the groups of patients with
increased and normal ACE values. Therefore, an increase in serum ACE
activity must not be assumed to be caused by sarcoidosis unless
histoplasmosis had been excluded.