The Pathology of Lung Diseases - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The Pathology of Lung Diseases

Description:

Title: PowerPoint Presentation Last modified by: lab Created Date: 1/1/1601 12:00:00 AM Document presentation format: Ekran G sterisi Other titles – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:841
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 66
Provided by: word163
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Pathology of Lung Diseases


1
The Pathology of Lung Diseases
  • I. RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASES
  • II. OBSTRUCTIVE LUNG DISEASES

2
I.RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASES-Diffuse
Interstitial Lung Disease-Infiltrative Lung
Disease-Fibrosing alveolitis-Honeycomb lung
3
  • Restrictive lung diseases are characterized by
    reduced lung volume,
  • an alteration in lung parenchyma
  • a disease of the pleura or chest wall
  • a disease of neuromuscular apparatus
  • In physiological terms, restrictive lung diseases
    are characterized by
  • reduced lung capacity
  • reduced total lung capacity (TLC)
  • reduced vital capacity
  • reduced resting lung volume

4
  • The many disorders that cause reduction or
    restriction of lung volumes may be divided into 2
    groups based on anatomical structures
  • 1. Intrinsic lung diseases (or diseases of the
    lung parenchyma),
  • 2. Extrinsic disorders (or extraparenchymal
    diseases).

5
  • 1.
  • Intrinsic lung diseases or diseases of the lung
    parenchyma
  • The diseases cause inflammation or scarring of
    the lung tissue (interstitial lung disease) or
    result in filling of the air spaces with exudate
    and debris (pneumonitis).

6
  • 2.
  • Extrinsic disorders or extraparenchymal diseases
  • Nonmuscular diseases of the chest wall, and
    neuromuscular disorders
  • The chest wall, pleura, and respiratory muscles
    are the components of the respiratory pump, and
    they need to function normally for effective
    ventilation.
  • If not
  • impaired ventilatory function,
  • respiratory failure.

7
(No Transcript)
8
Intrinsic lung diseases or Diseases of the lung
parenchyma
  • RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASES

9
  • These diseases can be characterized according to
    etiological factors
  • Acute restrictive pulmonary diseases (acute lung
    injury)
  • Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)
  • Acute Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis
  • Chronic restrictive pulmonary diseases
  • Idiopathic fibrotic diseases
  • Connective tissue diseases
  • Drug-induced lung disease
  • Primary diseases of the lungs (including
    sarcoidosis)

10
Acute restrictive pulmonary diseases
11
Acute Lung Injury
  • 1. Diffuse Alveolar Damage (Acute Respiratory
    Distress Syndrome - ARDS)
  • 2. Acute Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis (Extrinsic
    Allergic Alveolitis)

12
1. Diffuse Alveolar Damage (Acute Respiratory
Distress Syndrome - ARDS)
  • Diffuse alveolar damage (DAD) refers to a pattern
    of reaction to injury of alveolar epithelial and
    endothelial cells from a variety of acute
    insults.
  • The clinical counterpart of severe DAD is the
    acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).
  • In this disorder, a patient with apparently
    normal lungs sustains pulmonary damage and then
    develops rapidly progressive respiratory failure.
  • The condition reflects decreased lung compliance
    (usually requiring mechanical ventilation) and
    hypoxemia and features extensive radiologic
    opacities in both lungs (white-out).
  • The overall mortality of ARDS is more than 50,
    and in patients older than 60 years, it is as
    high as 90.

13
Nonthoracic Trauma
Shock due to any cause
Fat embolism
Infection
Gram-negative septicemia
Other bacterial infections
Viral infections
Aspiration
Near-drowning
Aspiration of gastric contents
Drugs and Therapeutic Agents
Heroin
Oxygen
Radiation
Paraquat
Cytotoxic drugs
ETIOLOGY Important Causes of the Acute
Respiratory Distress Syndrome
14
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Pathogenesis
  • Endothelial/capillary injury ?
  • alveolar capillary membrane damage ? increased
    vascular permeability ?
  • edema (interstitial/alveolar) ?
  • increased synthesis of neutrophil chemotacatic
    activating agents (IL) ?
  • activated neutrophils ?
  • oxidants, proteases, PAF, leukotriens ?
  • tissue damage ?
  • other mediators stimulating collagen production ?
  • Fibrosis

15
Pathology
  • Exudative phase (0-7 days)
  • congestion,
  • necrosis of alveolar epithelial cells,
  • edema,
  • hemorrhage,
  • neutrophils in capillaries,
  • Destruction of type I pneumocytes
  • permits exudation of fluid into alveolar spaces,
    where deposition of plasma proteins results in
    formation of fibrin-containing precipitates
    (hyaline membranes) on the injured alveolar walls

16
  • congestion
  • necrosis of alveolar epithelial cells
  • edema
  • hemorrhage
  • neutrophils in capillaries
  • hyaline membranes

17
  • If the patient survives the acute phase of ARDS
  • Proliferative phase (1-3 weeks)
  • Proliferation of type II pneumocytes
  • Cleaning of remnant hyaline membranes by
    pulmonary macrophages
  • Expansion of alveolar septa
  • Proliferation of fibroblasts
  • Collagen tissue production
  • Healing or Fibrosing
  • Fibrosing phase
  • Diffuse interstitial fibrosis
  • Honeycomb lung

18
  • Proliferation of type II pneumocytes
  • Cleaning of remnant hyaline membranes by
    pulmonary macrophages
  • Expansion of alveolar septa
  • Proliferation of fibroblasts

19
  • Diffuse interstitial fibrosis
  • Honeycomb lung.

20
2. Acute Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis (Extrinsic
Allergic Alveolitis)
  • A response to inhaled antigens
  • Farmer's lung occurs in farmers exposed to
    Micropolyspora faeni from moldy hay
  • Bagassosis results from exposure to
    Thermoactinomyces sacchari in moldy sugar cane
  • Maple bark-stripper's disease is seen in persons
    exposed to the fungus Cryptostroma corticale from
    moldy maple bark
  • Bird fancier's lung affects bird keepers with
    long-term exposure to proteins from bird
    feathers, blood and excrement
  • Hypersensitivity pneumonitis may also be caused
    by fungi growing in stagnant water in air
    conditioners, swimming pools, hot tubs, and
    central heating units.
  • Skin tests and serum precipitating antibodies are
    often used to confirm the diagnosis.
  • In many cases, especially in the chronic form of
    hypersensitivity pneumonitis, the inciting
    antigen is never identified.

21
Chronic restrictive pulmonary diseases
22
CHRONIC INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASES
  • Characterized by
  • - decreased lung volume
  • - decreased oxygen-diffusing capacity on
    pulmonary function studies

23
  • A large number of pulmonary disorders are grouped
    as interstitial, infiltrative, or restrictive
    diseases
  • They are characterized by inflammatory
    infiltrates in the interstitial space and have
    similar clinical and radiologic presentations
  • These diverse maladies
  • (1) are of known or unknown etiology, and
  • (2) vary from minimally symptomatic conditions to
    severely incapacitating and lethal interstitial
    fibrosis

24
Etiology
  • Occupational/environmental diseases (24)
  • Sarcoidosis (20)
  • Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (15)
  • Collagen-vascular diseases (8)
  • The remainder have more than 100 different
    causes and associations.

25
  • The most striking findings are
  • Longstanding inflammatory damage
  • Fibrosis of the alveolar walls
  • Fibrosis finally wipes out groups of alveoli
  • Scar contraction of respiratory bronchioles
  • The radiographic and autopsy diagnosis of
    "honeycomb lung"

26
ORGANIC DUST EXPOSURE
  • Chronic Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis
  • Chronic form of Acute Hypersensitivity
    Pneumonitis
  • The prototype of hypersensitivity pneumonitis is
    farmer's lung
  • Cause Inhalation of thermophilic actinomycetes
    that grow in moldy hay
  • Patients with the chronic form of
    hypersensitivity pneumonitis have a more
    nonspecific presentation, with indolent onset of
    dyspnea and cor pulmonale.

27
  • Pathology
  • The main microscopic features of chronic
    hypersensitivity pneumonitis include
  • bronchiolocentric cellular interstitial pneumonia
  • noncaseating granulomas (in two thirds of cases)
  • organizing pneumonia
  • The bronchiolocentric cellular interstitial
    infiltrate
  • lymphocytes
  • plasma cells
  • macrophages

28
  • Patchy mononuclear cell infiltrates,
  • Lymphocytes
  • Plasma cells
  • Epitheloid histiocytes
  • Interstitial noncaseating granulomas,
  • Interstitial fibrosis.

29
INORGANIC DUST EXPOSURE
  • Pneumoconioses
  • Dust inhalation
  • Silicosis
  • Asbestosis
  • Talcosis
  • Historically, knife grinder's lung (silicosis).

30
Mineral dust-induced lung diseases
  • Coal dust (upper lobe)
  • Silica (upper lobe)
  • Asbestos (lower lobe)
  • Beryllium

Coal workers Stone, Ceramics,
Sandblasting Mining, Milling, Insulation
Nuclear energy, Aircraft industry
31
  • Particles over 10 µm in diameter deposit on
    bronchi and bronchioles and are removed by the
    mucociliary escalator.
  • Smaller particles reach the acinus, and the
    smallest ones behave as a gas and are exhaled.
  • Alveolar macrophages ingest the inhaled particles
    and are the primary defenders of the alveolar
    space.
  • Most phagocytosed particles ascend to the
    mucociliary carpet and are expectorated or
    swallowed.
  • Others migrate into the interstitium of the lung,
    then into the lymphatics.

32
Air particulate exposure
  • Pneumoconioses
  • Pulmonary fibrosis
  • Asthma
  • Chronic bronchitis
  • Lung cancer

33
  • INORGANIC DUST EXPOSURE Silicosis
  • Inhalation of silicon dioxide (silica)
  • History Dyspnea in metal diggers was reported by
    Hippocrates
  • Early Dutch pathologists wrote that the lungs of
    stone cutters sectioned like a mass of sand.
  • The major cause of death in workers exposed to
    silica dust for the first half of the 20th
    century
  • Sandblasters
  • Stone cutting
  • Polishing and sharpening of metals
  • Ceramic manufacturing
  • Foundry work

34
  • After their inhalation, silica particles are
    ingested by alveolar macrophages
  • Silicon hydroxide groups on the surface of the
    particles form hydrogen bonds with phospholipids
    and proteins, an interaction that is presumed to
    damage cellular membranes and thereby kill the
    macrophages
  • The dead cells release free silica particles and
    fibrogenic factors ? progressive massive fibrosis
  • The released silica is then reingested by
    macrophages and the process is amplified

35
  • The nodular lesions consist of concentric layers
    of hyalinized collagen
  • Surrounded by a dense capsule of more condensed
    collagen
  • Examination of the nodules by polarized
    microscopy reveals the birefringent silica
    particles.

36
  • INORGANIC DUST EXPOSURE Coal Workers'
    Pneumoconiosis (CWP)
  • Coal dust is composed of amorphous carbon and
    other constituents of the earth's surface,
    including variable amounts of silica.
  • Anthracite (hard) coal contains significantly
    more quartz
  • Amorphous carbon by itself is not fibrogenic
  • Silica is highly fibrogenic, and inhaled
    anthracotic particles may thus lead to
    anthracosilicosis.

37
  • Asymptomatic anthracosis
  • Simple CWP
  • Coal macules
  • Coal nodules
  • Complicated CWP
  • Caplan syndrome

38
Asymptomatic anthracosis
39
  • CWP
  • Simple CWP
  • Complicated CWP (progressive massive fibrosis)
  • Coal-dust macules and coal-dust nodules
  • Both are typically multiple and scattered
    throughout the lung as 1- to 4-mm black foci
  • Microscopy
  • Coal-dust macule numerous carbon-laden
    macrophages
  • Coal-dust nodule round or irregular dust-laden
    macrophages associated fibrotic stroma
  • Focal dust emphysema

40
Coal workers pneumoconiosis (CWP)
Coal-dust nodule
Focal dust emphysema
41
  • Caplan syndrome
  • Rheumatoid nodules (Caplan nodules) in the lungs
    of coal miners with rheumatoid arthritis.
  • Nodular lesions (1-10 cm in diameter)
  • Multiple, bilateral, and usually peripheral
  • Microscopy
  • Rheumatoid nodule dust deposits
  • Rheumatoid nodules consist of large, central,
    necrotic areas surrounded by a border of chronic
    inflammation and palisading macrophages.

42
  • INORGANIC DUST EXPOSURE Asbestosis
  • Asbestos - a group of fibrous silicate minerals
  • Insulation
  • Construction materials
  • Automative brake linings

43
  • Asbestos is a naturally occurring fibrous
    silicate that was widely used in the past for
    commercial applications because of its
    heat-resistance properties.
  • Geometric forms of asbestos
  • 1. Amphibole (straight, stiff, and brittle
    fibers).
  • 2. Serpentine (curly and flexible fibers 90
    used in wide-world).

44
  • Asbestos exposure has been industrial or
    occupational and primarily affects workers
    involved in
  • mining or processing asbestos
  • shipbuilding
  • construction
  • textile
  • insulation-manufacturing industries
  • However, because the latency period between an
    initial exposure and the development of most
    asbestos-related disease is 20 years or longer,
  • Asbestos-related disease remains an important
    public health issue.

45
  • Exposure to asbestos can cause a number of
    thoracic complications
  • Asbestosis
  • Benign pleural effusion
  • Pleural plaques
  • Diffuse pleural fibrosis
  • Rounded atelectasis
  • Mesothelioma
  • Lung carcinoma

46
Asbestos-Related Lung Disease

Pleural lesions  Benign pleural effusion  Parietal pleural plaques  Diffuse pleural fibrosis  Rounded atelectasisInterstitial lung disease  AsbestosisMalignant mesotheliomaCarcinoma of the lung (in smokers)
47
  • ASBESTOSIS
  • Asbestosis is diffuse interstitial fibrosis
    resulting from inhalation of asbestos fibers
  • The development of asbestosis requires heavy
    exposure to asbestos
  • Asbestos may produce obstructive as well as
    restrictive defects
  • As the disease progresses, fibrosis spreads
    beyond the peribronchiolar location and
    eventually results in an end-stage or (honeycomb)
    lung
  • Asbestosis is usually more severe in the lower
    zones of the lung

48
  • Pathology
  • Lower lobes and subpleural
  • Diffuse pulmonary interstitial fibrosis
  • Asbestos bodies (golden brown, fusiform or beaded
    rods with a translucent center and knobbod ends)
  • Asbestos fibers coated with an iron-containing
    proteinaceous material (ferruginous body)

49
  • Lower lobes and subpleural
  • Diffuse pulmonary interstitial fibrosis

50
  • Asbestos fibers coated with an iron-containing
    proteinaceous material (ferruginous body)

51
Asbestos-Related Lung Disease Complications
Pleural lesions  Benign pleural
effusion  Parietal pleural plaques  Diffuse
pleural fibrosis  Rounded atelectasis Interstiti
al lung diseaseAsbestosis Progressive
fibrosis Pulmonary hypertension and cor
pulmonale Malignant mesothelioma (80 pleural
20 peritoneal in origin) Bronchogenic carcinoma
(20-25 of heavily exposed asbestos worker)
52
Berryliosis
  • Aerospace industry
  • Dusts/fumes of berrylium
  • Acute pneumonitis (high doses)
  • Pulmonary/systemic granulomatous lesions
  • Progressively fibrotic lung pathology

53
Primary or Unclassified diseases
  • SARCOIDOSIS
  • A granulomatous disease of unknown etiology
  • Sarcoidosis can involve many systems and organs
  • bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy (75-90 )
  • lung involvement (90)
  • eye and skin lesions
  • Most sarcoid patients are young adults
  • Exact pathogenesis of sarcoidosis remains obscure
  • T lymphocyte response to exogenous or autologous
    antigens
  • These cells accumulate in the affected organs,
    where they secrete lymphokines and recruit
    macrophages, which participate in the formation
    of noncaseating granulomas.

54
  • Pathology
  • Multiple sarcoid granulomas are scattered in the
    interstitium of the lung.
  • Frequent bronchial or bronchiolar submucosal
    infiltration by sarcoid granulomas accounts for
    the high diagnostic yield (lt90) on bronchoscopic
    biopsy.
  • The cellular granulomatous phase of sarcoidosis
    can progress to a fibrotic phase.
  • Significant necrosis is usually absent, small
    foci of necrosis are seen in one third of open
    lung biopsies.
  • Asteroid bodies (star-shaped crystals)
  • Schaumann bodies (small calcifications with a
    lamellar structure)

55
Kveim test
  • Kveim test, which involves taking ground-up
    spleen from someone with sarcoidosis and
    injecting it into the dermis,
  • If a granuloma forms, the living patient
    supposedly has sarcoidosis,
  • 80 sensitive, 95 specific.

56
  • noncaseating granulomas
  • Schaumanns bodies
  • asteroid bodies

57
IDIOPATHIC PULMONARY FIBROSIS
  • Usual Interstitial Pneumonia (UIP)
  • Syn Chronic interstitial pneumonitis,
    Interstitial pneumonitis, Idiopathic pulmonary
    fibrosis, Cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis
  • One of the most common types of interstitial
    pneumonia
  • Middle-aged men
  • Unknown etiology (?)
  • Viral (flu-like illness)
  • Genetic (familial UIP UIP-like diseases in
    neurofibromatosis and Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome)
  • Immunologic factors (collagen vascular diseases
    autoimmune disorders)

58
  • Circulating autoantibodies (e.g., antinuclear
    antibodies and rheumatoid factor).
  • Immune complexes (antigen?)
  • circulation,
  • inflamed alveolar walls,
  • bronchoalveolar-lavage specimens.
  • Immune complexes ? activated alveolar
    macrophages ? phagocytosis of immune complexes ?
    release of cytokines ? neutrophil migratrion ?
    damage of alveolar walls ? progression ?
    interstitial fibrosis

59
Pathology
  • The histologic hallmark patchy chronic
    inflammation and interstitial fibrosis with areas
    of dense scarring and honeycomb cystic change
  • The lungs are small
  • Fibrosis tends to be worse in the lower lobes,
    subpleural regions, and along interlobular septa

60
  • The honeycomb cystic spaces
  • lined by bronchiolar or cuboidal epithelium
  • contain mucus, macrophages, or neutrophils
  • interstitial chronic inflammation
  • lymphoid aggregates, sometimes containing
    germinal centers, in UIP associated with
    rheumatoid arthritis

61
  • Vascular changes
  • intimal fibrosis
  • thickening of the media
  • Progressive fibrosis of lungs ? respiratory
    insufficiency ? pulmonary hypertension ? cor
    pulmonale ? cardiac failure

62
  • Desquamative Interstitial Pneumonia (DIP)
  • Pathologically described entity
  • A diffuse lung disease characterized by marked
    accumulation of intraalveolar macrophages
  • intra-alveolar cells were desquamated epithelial
    cells, whereas they are now recognized as
    macrophages
  • The macrophages contain a fine golden-brown
    pigment.
  • Alveolar walls show mild thickening by chronic
    inflammation and interstitial fibrosis.
  • Scattered lymphoid aggregates also may be
    present.
  • Hyperplasia of type II pneumocytes is often
    prominent.

63
  • In cigarette smokers
  • The radiographic picture of DIP is not specific
    but is most frequently described as bilateral
    ground glass infiltrates with a lower lobe
    predominance
  • DIP has a much better prognosis than UIP
  • Most patients respond well to steroid therapy and
    smoking cessation

64
Collagen-Vascular Diseases Drugs and other
Treatments
  • Nonspecific Interstitial Pneumonia (NSIP)
  • Etiology
  • infection
  • collagen vascular disease
  • hypersensitivity pneumonitis
  • drug reaction, and others)
  • or it may be idiopathic.

65
  • Pathology
  • Diffuse uniform changes in the lung
  • NSIP
  • Cellular type alveolar septa are diffusely
    involved by a mild to moderate lymphcytic
    infiltrate.
  • Fibrosing type septa are diffusely involved by
    fibrosis, with or without significant associated
    inflammation.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com