Interstitial Lung Disease 1 - Clinical Aspects Flashcards

1
Q

What actually is the interstitium?

Important structures/molecules?

A

Interstitium = stuff between the alveolar epithelial cells and capillary endothelial cells.
Contains connective tissue stuff like collagen, elastin, reticulin, ECM, other proteins.

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2
Q

2 broad mechanisms of injury to interstitium?

A

Direct injury with response and repair.

Infiltration of interstitium.

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3
Q

If inflammation / fibrosis is deposited in interstitium, what happens to the lung?
(compliance, volume, air flow, gas exchange, etc.)

A

(static) Compliance reduced.
(static) Lung volume reduced.
Airflow typically is preserved.
Gas exchange impaired - due to impaired diffusion and V/Q mismatch.

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4
Q

4+ broad categories of interstitial lung disease (ILD)? (aka diffuse parenchymal lung disease -DPLD)

A

DPLD of known etiology - esp. drugs or collagen vascular disease.
Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF).
Idiopathic other than IPF (including acute interstial PNA).
Granulomatous DPLD (esp. sarcoidosis).
Other - (eg. LAM)

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5
Q

What are pneumoconioses?

A

Dust-induced diseases (eg. asbestosis, silicosis)

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6
Q

What’s the basis of diagnosis of an interstitial lung disease?

A
Typically you need to get lots of different data points:
History and physical.
CXR and HRCT.
Lab data.
PFTs.
Histology.
Response to therapy.
(just like... many diseases)
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7
Q

Typical symptoms of interstitial lung disease? (4 things)

A

Cough, usu. dry.
Dyspnea, esp with exertion.
Chest pain, wheezing, hoarseness.
Systemic symptoms: fever, joint pain, rashes, dysphagia etc.
(kind of a silly thing to list… lots of diseases, lots of different constellations of symptoms…)

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8
Q

4 typical physical examine findings in interstitial lung disease?

A

Tachypnea, shallow breathing.
Dry, “velcro” crackles.
Clubbing of digits (present in up to 50% of cases).
Extrapulmonary finding.

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9
Q

3 non-lung findings in CXR/HRCT that can help with Dx of interstitial lung disease?

A

Pleural effusion.
Pleural plaques.
Lymphadenopathy.

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10
Q

Methods of biopsy?

A

Transbronchial - for stuff that runs near larger airways.

Surgical.

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11
Q

What does “usual interstitial pneumonia” (UIP) refer to?

A

The pattern of damage seen in histology of IPF.

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12
Q

Most sensitive HRCT finding for IPF?

A

Honeycombing.

and… UIP…?

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13
Q

What does temporal heterogeneity refer to?

A

There are different lesions of varying ages in the biopsy sample - this is seen in IPF.

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14
Q

Is IPF the only thing that can cause UIP?

A

Nope… other things like collagen vascular disease, drug exposure, chronic sensitivity, asbestosis etc. can cause UIP.

(UIP is very sensitive, but not specific for IPF)

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15
Q

HRCT UIP is more specific for IPF than biopsy UIP.

A

Okay. But it’s still not 100%.

… but if you see UIP on both you can be pretty sure it’s IPF?

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16
Q

Median survival for IPF?

A

3 years.

Treatments so far don’t seem to help.

17
Q

Age range for when people develop sarcoidosis?

A

Bimodal - peak in 20s, and peak in 50s.

18
Q

Histological “hallmark” of sarcoidosis?

A

Non-caseating granulomas.

Necessary, but not specific, for diagnosis.

19
Q

DDx for non-caseating granulomas?

A
Infection (mycobacteria, fungi)
Malignancy
Exposures: Beryllium, talc
Vasculidites: GPA, 
Hypersensitiviy pneumonitis
20
Q

Do most patients with sarcoidosis have symptoms?

A

Nope.

21
Q

Organ most commonly affected by sarcoidosis?

A

lungs (which is why we’re talking about it)… but it can hit pretty much everything else.

22
Q

When working up sarcoidosis…

A

check on all the organ systems it could affect.

Make sure it’s not TB, etc.

23
Q

3 forms of cutaneous sarcoidosis?

A

Cutaneous granulomatosis.
Erythema nodosum.
Lupus pernio.

24
Q

4 radiographic stages of sarcoidosis?

A

Stage 1: Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy
Stage 2: Bilateral lymphadenopathy + parenchymal infiltrates.
Stage 3: Parenchymal infiltrates.
Stage 4: Advanced fibrosis.