In 2000, in a 75-year-old man, nodular and reticular opacities were detected in both lower lung fields. He was admitted to our hospital for further examination of these abnormal shadows. Bronchoscopic examination revealed pulmonary sarcoidosis. Prednisolone was prescribed because cardiac sarcoidosis was diagnosed as a clinical complication. In April 2002, the patient visited our hospital for dyspnea on effort. Chest radiography and computed tomography showed nodular and reticular opacities in the right upper lobe, and video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery was performed on the basis of a histological diagnosis. The histological findings of the biopsied specimens revealed a lesion of the type seen in usual interstitial pneumonia, whereas non-caseous granulomas were not detected. His symptoms and chest radiographic findings improved and stabilized with prednisolone and azathioprine. In the present case of pulmonary sarcoidosis, the reticular and nodular opacities predominantly distributed in both lower lung fields, and the histological findings obtained by video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery showed a usual interstitial pneumonia-like lesion. These findings may assist in the understanding of the process of development of pulmonary sarcoidosis.