Interstitial lung disease Flashcards
usual interstitial pneumona: etiology and clinical presentation
idopathic ( IPF- idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis) or secondary to asbestos, CT tissue disease, drug toxicities. cough and dyspnea with low DLCO, clubbing.
changes on chest x ray for usual interstitial pneumonia
reticular lines, honeycomb changes, no ground glass, nodules, or consolidation
Pathologic features of usual interstitial pneumonia
FIBROBLASTIC FOCI, temporal and spacial heterogeneity of scar deposition
usual inteststial pneumonia summary
IPF has a very bad prognosis peaks in 50s and 60s. lacks traditional inflammation but has fibroblastic foci lower lobe predominant poor prognosis no response to steroids
Aciute interstitial pneumonia: etitology
usually associated with severe infection or shock
may be secondary to toxic exposure or an exacerbation of UIP/IFP. may be idiopathic. causes acute respiratory distress syndrome
acute interstitial pneumonia clinical features
viral like prodrome, acute onset with bilateral alveolar infiltrates, fever in 50%, hypoxia, high mortality
Pathology of acute interstitial pneumonia
uniform temporal appearance, edema, hyaline membranes, epithelial cell necrosis, NO COLLAGEN OR HONEYCOMB change
Summary of acute interstitial pneumonia. diseases, pathology, treatment
it is the pathology associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome but may be associated with exacerbation of IPF.
diffuse, bilateral disease
pathology included epithelial damage and hyaline membranes without collagen deposition or honeycomb change.
no response to steroids and high mortality.
cryptogenic organizing pneumonia: summary
multiple etiologies often post-infectious mixed cellular infiltrate diffuse, bilateral, and patchy responds to steroids but often relapses.
crytpogenic organizing pneumonia etiology
idiopathic.
this pathology is called BOOP if it is related to a known cause like bleomycin, CT tissue diseases (rheumatoid arthritis, SLE), or post-infection
Pathology of crytpogenic organizing pneumonia
granulaiton tissue in small airways and alveolar ducts. chronic inflammation with mixed cellular infiltrate in surrounding alveoli. patchy distribution but lung architecture is preserved
silicosis summary
from inhalation of silica dust. associated with nodules and adenopathy that can calcify. usually upper airlobe disease. avoid exposures and be aware of greater risk of TB. most prevalent occupational lung disease worldwide.
silicosis clinical features
long latency, but acute form does exist. may be progressive, increased risk of cancer and TB.
Silicosis pathology
concenctrically layered hyalinized fibrous tissue. see crystals in the tissue under right microscope.
What is prgressive massive fibrosis. what is alveolar proteinosis
enlargement of masses in silicosis. associated with higher mortality.
alveolar proteinosis: from large dose silica exposure: see abnormal macrophage activity, accumulation of proteinaceous debris