Difference between revisions of "Idiopathic interstitial pneumonias"
From Radipedia
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*aka BOOP | *aka BOOP | ||
*Usually present after treatment with antibiotics and persistent fever and opacities | *Usually present after treatment with antibiotics and persistent fever and opacities | ||
+ | *Looks just like [[Eosinophilic pneumonia]] | ||
Revision as of 15:08, 3 June 2012
- Rare
- Reaction to lung injury
- Variable inflammation and fibrosis
- Variable response to treatment
Common disorders such as sarcoidosis, vasculitis and connective tissue disorders display an identicle morphologic pattern. Bleomycin drug toxicity can also give a similar appearance.
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF)
- Usual interstital pneumonia (UIP) is the histologic pattern
- Basal and peripheral reticular opacities
- Honeycombing, subpleural cysts
- Traction bronchiectasis due to surrounding fibrosis
- Apicobasal gradient - gets worse from apex to base
- Limited ground glass opacities
- Heterogeneous - diseased lung alternating with healthy lung
- Exclusion of known causes (toxins, environmental exposure, collagen vascular disease, etc)
- Reduced lung volume on x-ray
- Mean survival 3 years
Nonspecific intersitial pneumonia (NSIP)
- Basal ground glass opacitis predominate over reticulat opacities
- Rare minimal honeycombing
- Subpleural sparing
- Potentially reversible with immunosupression
- Homogeneous
- Can be cellular (GGO) and/or fibrotic (traction bronchiectasis"
- Much better prognosis than UIP, esecially cellular NSIP
Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (COP)
- Patchy peripheral subpleural or peribronchovascular consolidation
- Atoll sign, aka reverse halo
- Idiopathic inflammation of the bronchioles and surrounding tissue causing granulation tissue and "non-infectious pneumonia"
- Responds to steroids not antibiotics
- a/w many systemic diseases (lupus, c-anca, GVHD, etc)
- No pleural effusion or lymphadenopathy
- aka BOOP
- Usually present after treatment with antibiotics and persistent fever and opacities
- Looks just like Eosinophilic pneumonia
Respiratory Bronchiolitis associated Interstitial Lung Disease (RB ILD)
- Smoking related disease
- Centrilobular nodules
- Ground glass opacities
- Upper lobe predominant
Desquamative Intersitial Pneumonia (DIP)
- Smoking related disease
- Centrilobular nodules
- Ground glass opacities
- Same histology as RB-ILD, but further down the spectrum
Lymphoid Intersitial Pneumonia (LIP)
- Groung glass opacities
- Cystic lesions
Acute Interstial Pneumonia (AIP)
- Diffuse lung consolidation
- Groung glass opacities
- Progress to fibrosis after acute phase