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INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASE Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine
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Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASE

Esam H. Alhamad, M.DAssistant Professor of Medicine

Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine

Page 2: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

ATS/ERS. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2002;165:277-3

Page 3: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASEHypersensitivity Pneumonia

Idiopathic pulmonary Fibrosis

Smoking Associated ILD

Page 4: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

Hypersensitivity Pneumonia

AntigensMammalian and avian proteinFungiThermophilic bacteriaCertain small molecular weight compounds

Page 5: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

CLINCAL FORMSACUTE

SUBACUTE

• CHRONIC

Page 6: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

ACUTE FORMSymptoms appear 4-8 hour after exposure

Fever, chills, malaise, tightness of the chestcough, dyspnea, expectoration, headache

Symptoms gradually decrease over the next24-48 hours, but recur after next exposure

Page 7: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

SUBACUTE/CHRONIC FORMSContinuous low-level antigen exposure

(e.g few birds at home)

Insidious onset of the disease

Duration of symptoms 2-24 months

Page 8: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

SUBACUTE/CHRONIC FORMSChronic progressive dyspneaFatigue, poor appetite, weight lossCough with mucoid sputumOccasional digital clubbingMay progress to fibrosis, respiratory failure,

cor pulmonale

Page 9: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

CHEST X-RAY & HRCTGround glass opacitiesPoorly defined micronodulesPatchy air space opacificationFine and coarse reticular opacitiesHoneycombing ( chronic advanced cases)

Page 10: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.
Page 11: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.
Page 12: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

PULMONARY FUNCTION TESTSRestrictive, obstructive, or mixed defectMost common finding Dlco40% airflow obstructionEmphysema more common than fibrosis

Alhamad et al. Clin Chest Med 2001; 22:715-750

Page 13: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

BRONCHOALVEOLR LAVAGE T lymphocytes ~ 50%

CD8+ T-cells

CD4+ T-cells CD4+/CD8+ ratio CD4+/ CD8+

ratio

Page 14: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

LUNG BIOPSYLymphocytes infiltrationGranulomaBronchiolitisEmphysemaFibrosis

Page 15: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.
Page 16: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

DIAGNOSISClinical, radiologic and functional

abnormalities suggestive of an I.L.DHistory of exposure to HP antigensPositive specific antibodiesLung biopsy

Hypersensitivity pneumonitis

Page 17: Esam H. Alhamad, M.D Assistant Professor of Medicine Consultant Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine.

THERAPYAvoidance of antigen exposure

Corticosteroids