Interstitial and Occupational Lung Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What is interstitial lung disease?

A

Any disease process which affects the lung interstitium being alveoli, terminal branch e.t.c. Slide 3

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2
Q

What are types of Interstitial Lung Disease?

A

Idiopathic Interstitial Pneumonia
Granulomatous ILD
Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis. Slide 5

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3
Q

What is sarcoidosis?

A

A non-caseating granulomatous disease of unknown cause due to type IV hypersensitivity. Slide 6

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4
Q

What is the difference between acute and chronic sarcoidosis?

A

Acute: BHL. arthritis, fever, uveitis, parotits, erythema nodosum.

Chronic: Alveolitis, rashes, effects other organs, skin infiltrations, hypercalcaemia and peripheral lymphadenopathy. Slide 7

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5
Q

What are other diagnosis that could be similar in presentation as sarcoidosis?

A

TB, lymphoma, carcinoma, fungal infection. Slide 8

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6
Q

How do you treat acute and chronic sarcoidosis?

A

Acute: self limiting condition (usually no treatment)
Chronic: oral steroids and if that doesn’t work then immunosuppression. Slide 9

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7
Q

What is Extrinsic allergic alveolitis and what type of hypersensitivity is it?

A

Inflammation of lung tissue caused by atigens breathed in e.g. Thermophilic actinomycetes in Farmer’s lung
It is a type II hypersensitivity. Slide 15

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8
Q

What is the clinical presentation of acute hypersensitivity pneumonitis and the treatment?

A

Cough, breathless, fever, myalgia
Crackles but no wheeze
On a CXR there is a wide spread of pulmonary infiltrates
Treatment: O2, steroids and antigen avoidance. Slide 16

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9
Q

What is the clinical presentation of chronic hypersensitivity pneumonitis and the treatment?

A

Progressive breathlessness and cough
Crackles and pulmonary fibrosis on CXR
Treatment: remove antigen, oral steroids or low gas transfer. Slide 17

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10
Q

What is idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis?

A

Scarring of the lung tissue due to inbalance of fibrotic repair and is not inflammatory. Slide 19

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11
Q

What is the clinical presentation of IPF and what is the characteristic image in a CT scan of it?

A

Progressive breathlessness, bilateral infiltrates, clubbing and bilateral inspiratory crackles.
The CT scan shows traction bronciectasis, honeycomb changes and fibrotic shadowing at peripherals. Slide 20

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12
Q

How can you treat IPF?

A

Since it is not inflammation, steroids and immunosuppressants wouldn’t work.
However antifibrotic drugs e.g. pirfenidone and nintedanib can be used but are very expensive.
O2 supplied if hypoxic. Slide 22

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13
Q

What is progressive massive fibrosis?

A

Dense fibrosis that can make complicated pneumonoconiosis worse in coal workers. Slide 29+30

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14
Q

What can a few asbestos fibres cause in the lungs?

A

Benign pleural plaques which are asymptomatic. Slide 32

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