Respiratory: Pathology - Diffuse interstitial disease Flashcards
Five categories of interstitial lung disease with examples
- Fibrosing (e.g. idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, associated with connective tissue diseases, radiation pneumonitis, drug reactions)
- Granulomatous (e.g. sarcoidosis, hypersensitivity pneumonitis)
- Eosinophilic
- Smoking related (e.g. desquamative interstitial pneumonia)
- Other (e.g. pulmonary alveolar proteinosis)
Six manifestations of asbestos-related lung disease
- Localised fibrous plaques (or rarely, diffuse pleural fibrosis)
- Pleural effusions
- Parenchymal interstitial fibrosis (“asbestosis”)
- Lung carcinoma
- Mesothelioma
- Laryngeal and other extrapulmonary neoplasms (e.g. colon cancer)
What histological findings are seen with asbestos-related lung disease?
Asbestos bodies (phagocytosed asbestos)
Pleural plaques (on parietal pleura)
What is sarcoidosis?
Systemic disease of unknown cause characterised by noncaseating granulomas in many tissues
In what % of sarcoidosis cases is there observable CXR changes? What are the typical changes seen?
Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy or lung involvement in 90% of cases
How is sarcoidosis diagnosed?
Diagnosis of exclusion histologically, only definitively confirmed by biopsy (e.g. of liver or lymph node)
Suggested by elevated IgG and Ca2+, characteristic CXR and phalangeal XR changes, and typical clinical history
Eight symptoms of sarcoidosis. Which are the most common presenting complaint at time of diagnosis?
- May be asymptomatic
- Peripheral lymphadenopathy
- Cutaneous lesions
- Eye involvement
- Hepatomegaly
- Splenomegaly
- Respiratory difficulties (SOB, cough, chest pain, haemoptysis)*
- Constitutional symptoms (fever, fatigue, weight loss, anorexia, night sweats)*
- most common presenting complaint
Describe the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis
Lymphocytic alveolitis with predominance of CD4+ T cells -> increased cytokine release, granuloma formation
Polyclonal hypergammaglobulinaemia
See anergy in response to common skin test Ag (e.g. Candida, Tuberculin)
Histological changes seen in sarcoidosis
Noncaseating granulomas: tightly clustered epithelioid cells with Langhans or foreign body type giant cells (central necrosis unusual)
Schaumann bodies (laminated concentrations of Ca+ and protein) and asteroid bodies (stellate inclusions in giant cells) are seen in 60% of granulomas and are characteristic of sarcoidosis but can be seen in other granulomatous diseases (e.g. TB)
Five most common organ manifestations of sarcoidosis
- Lymph nodes (virtually always affected; most commonly hilar/mediastinal)
- Lung: diffuse, scattered granulomas manifesting as reticulonodular pattern on CXR
- Skin: discrete subcutaneous nodules, erythematous scaling plaques, mucous membrane lesions)
- Spleen and liver
- Eye: iritis, iridocyclitis, choroid retinitis
What % of patients diagnosed with sarcoidosis will:
- have no or minimal residual manifestations?
- have permanent lung or ocular dysfunction?
- die (usually as a result of progressive pulmonary fibrosis and cor pulmonale)?
- 65-70%
- 20%
- 10-15%