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Interstitial lung disease. Paul Swift. What the?. Extrinsic Allergic alveolitis Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis Industrial dust disease Organic dust disease Sarcoidosis. What’s important. Pathophysiology Clinical features Investigation Management Prognosis. Expaaaaand.
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Interstitial lung disease Paul Swift
What the? • Extrinsic Allergic alveolitis • Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis • Industrial dust disease • Organic dust disease • Sarcoidosis
What’s important • Pathophysiology • Clinical features • Investigation • Management • Prognosis
Expaaaaand • Pathophysiology • Varies: inflammation scarring fibrosis • Presentation • Variation on a theme • SOBOE, lethargy, dry cough • SMOKING, PETS, OCCUPATION • O/E • Tachypnoea, clubbing • Cyanosis • Fine end inspiratory creps
Investigation • Investigations • Bedside • PEF (work v. home) • ABG sats • RR • Blood • FBC, U&Es, LFTs, CRP, ESR • ANA and Rf in IPF sometimes • Imaging • CXR • HRCT
Special tests • Lung function tests • Restrictive defect • FVC is reduced • FEV1 is reduced in proportion or slightly less • FEV1:FVC ratio normal or raised • TLCO the key! • Thickened fibrotic alveolar walls shit for gas transfer • Others: Bronchoscopy, bronchoalveolarlavage
Treatment • Conservative • Weight loss • Increased exercise • Smoking cessation • Medical • Oxygen • Steroids • Surgical • Transplant
Extrinsic allergic alveolitis • AKA- hypersensitivtypenumonitis • Type III hypersensitivity reaction • Prior sensitisation to inhaled antigen • Examples • Mould hay (farmer’s lung) • Bird faeces (bird fancier’s lung) • Cotton fibres (byssionosis) • Sugar can fibres (bagassosis)
Clinical features • Standard stuff • Cough • SOB • Fever • Malaise • Acute onset hours after exposure • More insidious if long-term exposure to small amounts • O/E: Coarse end inspiratory crackles- upper lung • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HTNo_ovhcv8
Investigations • Bedside • Bloods • Neutrophil & leukocyte count • IgG antibody titres
Investigations • Imaging • CXR • Often normal in acute form • Subacute- reticular nodular Shadowing • Chronic- fibrosis with volume loss • HRCT • Special • Lung function • Bronchoalveolar lavage • Hisolopathological diagnosis
Treatment • Conservative • Antigen avoidance!!!! • Medical: ?Corticosteroids • Yup, severe disease • Speed initial recovery • Prognosis • Variable, depends on antigen avoidance
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis • AKA- Cryptogenic FibrosingAlveolitis, Usual Intersitial Pneumonitis • Rare progressive chronic pulmonary fibrosis of unknown aetiology • Peak @ 45-65yrs
IPF- patho • Alveolar walls thickened because of fibrosis • Predominantly lower lobes • Number of chronic inflammatory cells in alveoli and interstitium • Usual interstitial pneumonitis • Other patterns: • Desquamative interstitial pneumonitis • Bronchiolitis obliterans
Clinical features • Same old • SOB • Dry cough • Fatigue • Can get considerable weight loss • More chronic/late stage • Cyanosis • Pulmonary hypertension/corpulmonale • Resp failure
On examination • O/E • Clubbing • 2/3!! • Chest expansion reduced • Fine-end inspiratory crackles • N/B. Associations
Investigations • Bedside • ABG resp failure • Bloods • Autoantibodies • ANA +ive in 1/3 • Rf +ive in ½ • Raised ESR
Investigations • Imaging • CXR • HRCT • Special • Lung function • BAL • Neutrophils • Transbronchial or open lung biopsy for histological diagnosis
Treatment • Conservative • Stop smoking • Weight Exercise • Medical • 50% respond to immunosuppression with combo therapy recommended: • Prednisolone 0.5mg/kg 1/12 • Azathioprine 2-3mg/kg • (can sub in cyclophosphamide for azathioprine) • Oxygen • Surgical • Transplant
Prognosis • 50% 5 year survival
More dust disease • The pneumoconioses • CABS • Coal Worker’s pneumoconiosis • Asbestosis • Berylliosis • Silicosis • Group of disorders due to inhlationof mineral or biological dusts
Coal Worker’s pneumoconiosis • Dose dependent • Simple • Coal dust deposition in the lung • Asymptomatic • Diagnosis made by several small round opacities on CXR • Caplan’s • Severe disease may progress to progressive massive fibrosis
Progressive massive fibrosis • Large round fibrotic nodules >10mm • Upper lobes • Scarring • Dyspnoea, cough, sputum • May be black if cavitating lesions
PMF treatment • Progresses when exposure removed • Unlike simple • Prognosis is poor, no treatment • Coal Workers Pneumoconiosis Scheme • Pneumoconiosis Workers’ Compensation Act 1979 • Lump sum compensation
Asbestosis • Inhlation of asbestos • Plumbers, electricians, builders • Blue asbestos (crocidolite) • Can’t be cleared by immune system • Histology: asbestos bodies and features of pulmonary fibrosis, affecting lower lobes more
Rx • No treatment • Considerable time lag: 20-40 years following exposure • Compensation • Risk……….
Sarcoidosis • A 25-year old afro-Caribbean woman presents with SOB and bilateral leg lesions…… • Multisystem granulomatous disorder of unknown aetiology • Commonly effects the lungs • Non-caseating granulomas • Rare (19/100000 in UK) • Peak 20-40yrs
Sarcoid path • Non-caseating granulomas • (Infiltrated by Th1 lymphocytes and macrophages) • (Fuse to multinucleated epithelioid cells) • Resolution of granulomas • 10-20% persistent interstitial fibrosis
Clinical features • 90% have pulmonary involvement • SOB • Chest pain • Cough • Non-specific features • Lymphadeopathy • Weight loss • Fever • Fatigue
Inv • Bedside • The usual • Bloods • FBC (normochronicnormocycticanaemia) • ESR • Serum Ca2+ • Serum ACE • Can be 2x normal levels • Used to monitor progression • Imaging- CXR
Expensive stuff • HRCT • Staging • Identifying pulmonary fibrosis • Biopsy • GOLD standard for diagnosis
Rx • Hilar lymphadenopathy and no pulmonary involvement = no treatment • Medical • Infiltration > 6weeks = steroids • Prognosis • Depends on stage • Mortality < 5% UK • Shadowing on CXR >2 years risk pulm fibrosis
Summary • Pathogenesis • Varied but endstage is fibrosis and inflammation of the alveoli and interstitium • Presentation • Cough, SOB, fine end inspiratory crackles • Smoking, occupation, pets • Investigations • Bed, blood, imaging, special • Lung function- restrictive • CT- honeycombing, groundglass • Treatment • Steroids, transplant, avoid exposure
Case study A 64 year old gentleman presents to his GP with increasing SOB over the last 6 months. His exercise tolerance has reduced to the point where walking to the corner shop makes him out of breath. He also complains of a dry cough. He has a past medical history of high blood pressure which is managed with Ramipril. He has never smoked and works as an office manager. On examination he is slightly short of breath with O2 sats 93% on air and he has clubbing. Auscultation reveals bilateral basal fine end inspiratory crepitations and no wheeze.
???? • What are your main differential diagnoses for this gentleman? (make sure these include all important differentials that must be ruled out) • How would you investigate this gentleman? • What is your management plan? Will anything help? • Can you tell me about the pathophysiology of ILD? • Can you tell me some causative organisms for EAA?