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1. INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASE Esam H. Alhamad, M.D
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine
2.
ATS/ERS. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2002;165:277-3
3. SMOKING ASSOCIATED INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASE
4. Desquamative Interstitial Pneumonia (DIP) Liebow 1965
DIP desquamation of epithelial cells?, but the main histopathologic finding is accumulation of macrophages within alveolar space
90% smoked or had smoked cigarettes
May occasionally be seen with CTD, and drug induced lung disease
5. DIP: SURVIVALNicholson et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2000;162:2213-2217
6. Desquamative Interstitial Pneumonia DIPClinical Features Young adult, average 40-50 yr
Men > women
Dyspnea 87% Cough 43%
Inspiratory crackles 57%
Digital clubbing 26%
Pulmonary function: Restrictive 30%, Obstructive 15%, ?Dlco 35%, Normal 20%
Ryu et al. Chest 2005;127:178-184
7. Desquamative Interstitial Pneumonia DIPHRCT Ground glass opacities 83%
Bilateral reticular opacities 17%
Patchy consolidation 6%
Honeycombing rare
8. Desquamative Interstitial Pneumonia DIP
9. HRCT: Contrasting DIP with UIP
10. DIP: Treatment and Outcome Prognosis is generally good, average survival 12 yrs (Carrington et al. Nengl J Med 1978;298:801-809)
Spontaneous improvement has been reported
Corticosteroids and smoking cessation seems to be effective, immunosuppresive agents?
Late relapse and recurrence in transplanted lung has been reported
Progression to respiratory failure is uncommon
11. Respiratory Bronchiolitis Associated Interstitial Lung Disease (RB-ILD) Extremely common histopathologic lesion in cigarette smoker
Slight male predominance
Dyspnea, cough
Inspiratory crackles 42%
Digital clubbing 25%
Ryu et al. Chest 2005;127:178-184
12. RB-ILD SURVIVALNicholson et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2000;162:2213-2217
13. RB-ILD: HRCT findings Ground glass opacities 100%
Centrilobular nodules are common
Associated emphysematous changes may occur
Honeycombing is rare
15. What is the most common misdiagnosis given to patients with hypersensitivity pneumonitis?
Bacterial or viral pneumonia
16. What are the symptoms seen in acute hypersensitivity pneumonitis which occour four to six hours after antigen exposure?
Fever, chills, dyspnea, and malaise
17. What physical findings are seen in acute hypersensitivity pneumonitis?
Fever, pulmonary crackles, possibly cyanosis
18. What is the most common physical abnormality in subacute disease?
Diffuse crackles
19. Where are the infiltrates in hypersensitivity pneumonitis?
Usually bilateral and equally distributed
(involving the upper lobes)
20. What is the chest x-ray findings in the early stages of the disease?
Within normal limit
21. What is the chest x-ray finding in chronic disease?
Diffuse interstitial fibrosis
22. What is the classic PFT abnormality in hypersensitivity pneumonitis?
Restrictive pattern
23. What is the main cause of respiratory disability in patients with hypersensitivity pneumonitis?
Pulmonary fibrosis
24. Which patient is least likely to have IPF:
A 30 year old man, a 50 year old woman, or a 70 year old man?
30 year old man, IPF most commonly diagnosed in individuals between the ages of 40-70 years
25. Approximately 60% of patients with IPF have what extremity findings?
Clubbing
26. What is the most common cause of death in patients with IPF?
Respiratory failure
27.
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