Title: Interstitial and Occupational Lung Disease
1Interstitial and Occupational Lung Disease
- Dr Robin Smith
- Dept of Respiratory Medicine
2Interstitial Disease
- Any disease process affecting lung interstitium
(ie alveoli, terminal bronchi). - Interferes with gas transfer
- Restrictive lung pattern (may also have some
airway obstruction if small airways involved) - Symptoms breathlessness, dry cough
3Interstitial Lung Disease
- Classification
- Acute
- Episodic
- Chronic - part of systemic disease
- - exposure to agent (e.g. drug, dust etc)
- - idiopathic
4Acute ILD
- Infection - usually viral
- Allergy - eg drug reaction
- Toxins - cytotoxic drugs, toxic fumes e.g.
chlorine - Vasculitis - eg Wegeners granulomatosis,
Churg-strauss, SLE, Goodpastures syndrome - ARDS - trauma, sepsis
5Episodic ILD
- Pulmonary eosinophilia
- Vasculitis (Churg-Strauss, Wegeners, SLE)
- Extrinsic Allergic Alveolitis
- Cryptogenic Organising Pneumonia
6Chronic ILD as part of systemic disease
- Connective Tissue Disease (eg Rheumatoid
arthritis, SLE, Systemic Sclerosis, Ankylosing
Spondylosis) - Vasculitis (Churg-Strauss, Wegeners, SLE)
- Sarcoidosis
- Cancer (lymphoma, lymphangitis carcinomatosis)
- Miscellaneous - tuberose sclerosis, lipid storage
disorders, neurofibromatosis, amyloidosis,
miliary TB, bone marrow transplant)
7Chronic ILD - exposure to foreign agent
- Fibrogenic inorganic dusts - coal, silica,
asbestos, aluminium, - Non-fibrogenic dust - siderosis (iron), stannosis
(tin), baritosis (barium) - Granulomatous/fibrogenic - berylliosis
- Organic dusts - Farmers lung (Microsporylium),
bagassosis (mouldy sugar cane), Bird fanciers
lung - (feather and dropping antigen)
8Chronic ILD - idiopathic
- Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF) also known
as Cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis (CFA) - Cryptogenic organising pneumonia (COP)
- Sarcoidosis
- Alveolar proteinosis
- Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM)
- many other rarer causes
9- SARCOIDOSIS
- Multiple-system disease
- common - lungs, lymph nodes, joints, liver,
skin, eyes - less common - kidneys, brain, nerves, heart
- non-caseating granuloma of unknown aetiology
probable infective agent in susceptible
individual. Imbalance of immune system with type
4 (cell mediated) hypersensitivity - Types
- Acute sarcoidosis
- erythema nodosum, bilateral hilar
lymphadenopathy, arthritis, uveitis, parotitis,
fever. - Chronic sarcoidosis lung infiltrates
(alveolitis), skin infiltrations, peripheral
lymphadenopathy, myocardial, neurological,
hepatitis, splenomegaly, hypercalcaemia.
10- SARCOIDOSIS
- Differential diagnosis TB (tuberculin test
-ve), Lymphoma, Carcinoma, fungal infection. - Chest X-ray (BHL), CT scan of lungs (peripheral
nodular infiltrate) - Tissue biopsy (eg transbronchial, skin, lymph
node) ? non-caseating granuloma. - Pulmonary function Restrictive defect due to
lung infiltrates. - Blood test
- - Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (ACE) levels as
activity marker (NOT diagnostic test). - - raised calcium
- - increased inflammitory markers
- Acute self-limiting condition.
- Chronic oral steroids if vital organ affected
(eg lung, eyes, heart, brain).
11- SARCOIDOSIS
- Treatment
- Acute self-limiting condition - usually no
treatment - Steroids if vital organ affected (eg impaired
lung function, heart, eyes, brain, kidneys) - Chronic oral steroids usually needed
- Immunosuppression (eg azathioprine,
methotrexate) - monitor chest X-ray and pulmonary function for
several years - often relapses
12Erythema Nodosum-Sarcoidosis
13Iritis due to sarcoidosis
14Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy and lung
infiltrares -Sarcoidosis
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17- EXTRINSIC ALLERGIC ALVEOLITIS I
- Type III hypersensitivity (Immune complex
deposition) reaction to antigen ? lymphocytic
alveolitis (hypersensitivity pneumonitis). - Aetiology Microsporylium (farmers lung, malt
workers, mushroom workers), avian antigens (bird
fanciers lung), drugs (gold, bleomycin,
sulphasalazine) - Can be ACUTE or CHRONIC
- ACUTE cough, breathless, fever, myalgia -
several hours after acute exposure (flu-like
illness) - Signs /- pyrexia, crackles (no wheeze!),
hypoxia - CxR widespread pulmonary infiltrates
- Treatment oxygen, steroid and antigen avoidance
18- EXTRINSIC ALLERGIC ALVEOLITIS II
- CHRONIC ? repeated low dose antigen exposure
over time ? progressive breathlessness and cough - Signs may be crackles, clubbing is unusual
- CxR pulmonary fibrosis - most commonly in the
upper zones - PFTs restrictive defect (low FEV1 FVC, high or
normal ratio, low gas transfer - TLCO) - Diagnosis history of exposure, precipitins (IgG
antibodies to guilty antigen), lung biopsy if in
doubt. - Treatment remove antigen exposure, oral steroids
if breathless or low gas transfer.
19Extrinsic allergic alveolitisAvian
20- IDIOPATHIC PULMONARY FIBROSIS
- (also known as Cryptogenic Fibrosing Alveolitis)
- Most common interstitial lung disease
- Clinical presentation progressive
breathlessness, dry cough - OE clubbing, bilateral fine inspiratory
crackles, - Ix restrictive defect (reduced FEV1 and FVC
with normal or raised FEV1/FVC ratio, reduced
lung volumes, low gas transfer CxR - bilateral
infiltrates - CT scan - reticulonodular fibrotic change, worse
at the lung bases. The presence of ground-glass
suggests reversible alveolitis fibrosis is
irreversible. - Causes Primary (Idiopathic)
- Secondary (eg rheumatoid, SLE, systemic
sclerosis, drugs - amiodarone, busulphan,
bleomycin, penicillamine, nitrofurantoin,
methotrexate).
21- IDIOPATHIC PULMONARY FIBROSIS II
- Differential diagnosis exclude occupational
disease (asbestosis, silicosis), mitral valve
disease, left ventricular failure, sarcoidosis,
extrinsic allergic alveolitis. - Ask about occupation (in depth), pets and drugs
- Diagnosis combination of history, examination
and radiology tests - If the presentation is atypical then lung biopsy
(either transbronchial or thoracascopic) is
needed - Pathology chronic inflammatory infiltrate
(neutrophils and fibrosis in alveolar walls
intra-alveolar macrophages.
22- IDIOPATHIC PULMONARY FIBROSIS III
- Treatment not clear if influences course of
disease - oral steroids immunosuppressive drugs (eg
azathioprine combined with N-acetyly cisteine)
worth trying if patient is lt75 years and evidence
of acute inflammation on CT scan - some response
in 30. -
- NB treatment is aimed as slowing future
progression rather than reversing established
fibrosis. - Oxygen if hypoxic.
- Lung transplantation in young patients
- Future treatments ?Anti-fibrotic agents
- ?anti-TNFa
- pulmonary artery vasodilators
- Prognosis most patients progress into
respiratory failure and are dead within 5 years
23DIP-pre steroids
Fibrosing Alveolitis
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25Lymphocytic alveolitis and intralumenal
macrophages
26- COAL WORKERS PNEUMOCONIOSIS
- Simple pneumoconiosis - chest X-ray abnormality
only (no impairment of lung function - often
associated with chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease). - Complicated pneumoconiosis - progressive massive
fibrosis ? restrictive pattern with
breathlessness. - Chronic bronchitis (coal dust smoking).
- Caplans syndrome - rheumatoid pneumoconiosis
(pulmonary nodules).
27- SILICOSIS
- 15-20 years exposure to quartz (eg mining,
foundry workers, glass workers, boiler workers). - Simple pneumoconiosis - chest X-ray abnormality
only (egg-shell calcification of hilar nodes). - Chronic silicosis - restrictive pattern,
pulmonary fibrosis.
28Coal workers progressive massive fibrosis
29Coal workers progressive massive fibrosis
30Baritosis
31- ASBESTOS-related lung disorders
- Mining, construction, shipbuilding, boilers and
piping, automotive components (eg brake linings). - Pleural disease -
- 1- Benign pleural plaques - asymptomatic
- 2- Acute asbestos pleuritis - fever, pain,
bloody pleural effusion - 3- Pleural Effusion and Diffuse pleural
thickening - restrictive impairment - 4- Malignant Mesothelioma - incurable pleural
cancer. Presents with chest pain and pleural
effusion. No available treatment - fatal within
two years. - Pulmonary Fibrosis - Asbestosis - heavy
prolonged exposure. Diffuse pulmonary fibrosis
and restrictive defect. Asbestos bodies in
sputum. Asbestos fibres in lung biopsy. - Bronchial carcinoma - asbestos multiplies risk in
smokers
32Asbestosis
33Asbestos pleural plaques and Bronchial Ca
34Pleural effusion due to mesothelioma
35- OCCUPATIONAL ASTHMA
- Sensitising agents - high molecular weight (eg
bakers, enzymes, gums, latex) - low molecular
weight (eg isocyanates, wood dust,
glutaraldehyde, solder, flux, dye, adhesives,
drugs). - Diagnosis RAST test, provocation testing, PEFR
at home/work. - Reactive airway dysfunction syndrome - acute
episode of toxic gas or fume inhalation (eg
chlorine or sulphur dioxide) ? followed by
persistent bronchial hyperreactivity.
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37 hhhttp//www.radiology.co.uk/srs-x/index.htm
guidelines)
Useful clinical X-ray teaching sites
http//www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/clinical-informati
on/interstitial-lung-disease-(dpld)/interstitial-l
ung-disease-(dpld)-guideline.aspx