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Interstitial lung
disease
Introduction
More
than 100 conditions make up the group of disorders
called interstitial lung disease. Most of them cause
progressive scarring of lung tissue that eventually
affects your ability to breathe and obtain enough
oxygen, but beyond this, the disorders vary
greatly.
Although the majority of cases of
interstitial lung disease develop gradually with few
warning signs, a few come on suddenly. Some are more
common in men than in women, but a few affect women
exclusively. And although doctors can pinpoint why some
cases of interstitial lung disease occur, most have no
known cause.
In
all cases, lung scarring, once it occurs, is generally
irreversible. Corticosteroid drugs, the most common
treatment, occasionally can slow the damage of
interstitial lung disease, but many people never regain
full use of their lungs. Researchers hope that newer
drugs, many of them still in the experimental stage, may
eventually prove more effective than
steroids.
Signs and
symptoms
Despite the wide variety of disorders
classified as interstitial lung disease, the signs and
symptoms are often remarkably
similar:
- A
feeling of breathlessness (dyspnea), especially during
or after physical activities
- A
dry cough
Because these problems are vague and tend
to develop gradually — often long after you have
irreversible lung damage — you may attribute them to
aging, to being overweight or out of shape, or to the
residual effects of an upper respiratory
infection.
Symptoms tend to become progressively
worse, however, and eventually you may become out of
breath during routine activities — getting dressed,
talking on the phone, even eating. At this point,
breathing problems become impossible to
ignore.
Other, far less common signs and symptoms
of some types of interstitial lung disease include
wheezing, unintended weight loss and clubbing of the
fingers, which occurs when your fingertips painlessly
enlarge and the nails curve over the tops of your
fingertips.
Causes
Each
time you inhale, air travels to your lungs through two
major airways called bronchi. Inside your lungs, the
bronchi subdivide like the roots of a tree into a
million smaller airways (bronchioles) that finally end
in clusters of tiny air sacs (alveoli) — about 300
million in each lung. Within the walls of the air sacs
are small blood vessels (capillaries) where oxygen is
added to your blood and carbon dioxide — a waste product
of metabolism — is removed.
In
interstitial lung disease, the walls of the air sacs may
become inflamed, and the tissue (interstitium) that
lines and supports the sacs becomes increasingly
scarred. Normally, the air sacs are highly elastic,
expanding and contracting like small balloons with each
breath. But scarring (fibrosis) causes the thin,
interstitial tissue to become stiffer and thicker,
making the air sacs less flexible. Instead of being soft
and elastic, scarred air sacs have the texture of a dry
sponge, which makes it more difficult to breathe and
harder for oxygen to enter your
bloodstream.
Scarring in interstitial lung disease
seems to occur when an injury to your lungs triggers an
abnormal healing response. Ordinarily, your body
generates the right amount of tissue to repair damage.
But in interstitial lung disease, the repair process
goes awry, producing excess scar tissue that
increasingly interferes with lung
function.
One disorder, many
causes Because interstitial lung disease has a wide
range of causes, determining the reason for an initial
injury to lung tissue can be difficult. Some of the many
possible precipitating factors
include:
- Infections. These
include viral infections such as cytomegalovirus, a
particular problem for people with compromised immune
systems; bacterial infections, including pneumonia;
fungal infections such as histoplasmosis; and
parasitic infections.
- Occupation and
environmental factors. Long-term exposure to a number
of toxins or pollutants can lead to serious lung
damage. Workers who routinely inhale silica dust
(silicosis), asbestos fibers (asbestosis) or hard
metal dust are especially at risk of debilitating lung
disease. So are people exposed to certain chemical
fumes — sulfuric acid, for example — and ammonia or
chlorine gases. But chronic exposure to a wide range
of substances, many of them organic, also can damage
your lungs. Among these are grain dust, sugar cane,
and bird and animal droppings. Other substances, such
as moldy hay, can be a problem when they cause a
hypersensitivity reaction in the lungs
(hypersensitivity pneumonitis). Even bacterial or
fungal overgrowth in poorly maintained humidifiers and
hot tubs can cause lung damage.
- Radiation. A small
percentage of people who receive radiation therapy for
lung or breast cancer show signs of lung damage months
or sometimes years after the initial treatment. The
severity of the damage depends on how much of the lung
is exposed to radiation, the total amount of radiation
administered, whether chemotherapy also is used and
the presence of underlying lung disease.
- Drugs. Nearly 50
drugs can damage the interstitium of the lungs,
especially chemotherapy drugs, medications used to
treat heart arrhythmias and other cardiovascular
problems, certain psychiatric medications, and some
antibiotics.
- Other medical
conditions. Interstitial lung disease can occur with
other disorders. Often, those conditions don't
directly attack the lungs, but instead involve
systemic processes that affect tissue throughout the
body. Among these are connective tissue disorders and
hematological diseases, including systemic lupus
erythematosis, rheumatoid arthritis, dermatomyositis,
polymyositis, Sjogren's syndrome and sarcoidoisis.
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis:
When the cause isn't known Although doctors can
determine why some people develop interstitial lung
disease, in most cases the cause isn't known. Disorders
without a known cause are considered a subset of
interstitial lung disease and are grouped together under
the label idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis or
idiopathicinterstitial lung disease. Although the
idiopathic diseases have certain features in common,
each also has unique
characteristics.
Usual
interstitial pneumonitis is the most prevalent of the
idiopathic interstitial lung diseases. Accounting for
more than half of all cases, it's so common that the
terms "usual interstitial pneumonitis" and "idiopathic
pulmonary fibrosis" are often used interchangeably.
Because usual interstitial pneumonitis develops in
patches, some areas of the lungs are normal, others are
inflamed and still others are marked by scar tissue. The
disease affects twice as many men as women and usually
develops between the ages of 40 and
70.
Although the names are nearly identical,
pneumonitis is not the same as pneumonia. Pneumonitis is
lung inflammation without infection, whereas pneumonia
is lung inflammation that results from infection. In
addition, pneumonia is generally limited to one or two
areas of the lungs, but pneumonitis involves all five
lobes — two in the left lung and three in the
right.
Other, less common types of idiopathic
pulmonary fibrosis include nonspecific interstitial
pneumonitis, bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing
pneumonia (BOOP), respiratory bronchiolitis-associated
interstitial lung disease, desquamative interstitial
pneumonitis, lymphocytic interstitial pneumonitis and
acute interstitial pneumonitis.
Risk
factors
Factors that may make you more
susceptible to interstitial lung disease
include:
- Age. Although
infants and children occasionally develop interstitial
lung disease, the disorder is much more likely to
affect adults. Idiopathic forms of the disease usually
develop between the ages of 40 and 70.
- Your sex. Given the
wide range of disorders classified as interstitial
lung disease, it's hard to say definitively whether
the disease affects one sex more than the other. But
there are a few notable exceptions.
Lymphangioleiomyomatosis, for example, a rare disorder
in which muscle cells invade and eventually obstruct
the airways and blood and lymph vessels in the lungs,
affects only women of childbearing age. And lung
diseases resulting from exposure to occupational
toxins are much more common in men than they are in
women.
- Exposure to
occupational and environmental toxins. If you work in
mining, farming or construction or for any reason are
exposed to pollutants known to damage your lungs, your
risk of interstitial lung disease greatly increases.
- Radiation and
chemotherapy. Having radiation treatments to your
chest or using some chemotherapy drugs makes it more
likely that you'll develop lung disease.
Risk factors for idiopathic
interstitial lung disease Researchers have identified
certain factors that appear to increase the risk of
idiopathic lung disease, even though the cause of the
disorder isn't yet
known.
- Smoking. Far more
smokers and former smokers develop idiopathic
interstitial lung diseases than do people who have
never smoked. The risk seems to increase with the
number of years and the number of cigarettes smoked.
- Genetic factors.
One rare type of idiopathic interstitial lung disease
runs in families. Called familial pulmonary fibrosis,
it's similar to other forms of the disease but
symptoms tend to appear at a younger age.Although
research is being done on familial pulmonary fibrosis,
researchers haven't yet identified the genes that may
be involved. They have, however, discovered genetic
alterations in surfactant proteins — substances in the
airways and air sacs that protect the lungs and help
them function normally — in people with other forms of
idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
- Gastroesophageal
reflux disease (GERD). Researchers are investigating a
possible link between idiopathic interstitial lung
disease and gastroesophageal reflux disease, which
occurs when stomach acid or, occasionally, bile salts
back up into your esophagus.
When to seek medical
advice
By
the time signs and symptoms such as breathlessness and
cough appear, irreversible lung damage has often already
occurred. Nevertheless, it's important to see your
doctor at the first sign of breathing problems. Many
conditions other than interstitial lung disease can
affect your lungs, and getting an early and accurate
diagnosis is important for proper
treatment.
Screening and
diagnosis
Identifying and determining the cause of
interstitial lung disease can be extremely challenging.
An unusually large number of disorders, with more than
200 causes, fall into this broad category. What's more,
the distinction between interstitial lung disorders with
identifiable causes and those with no known cause isn't
always clear, and the nomenclature and classification
systems of both have historically been confusing and
controversial. In addition, the signs and symptoms of a
wide range of medical conditions — among them chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), heart failure and
asthma — can mimic interstitial lung disease, and
doctors must rule these out before making a definitive
diagnosis.
To
help cut through the confusion and rule out other
possible illnesses, doctors normally begin by taking a
comprehensive medical history, focusing especially on
occupational exposure to lung-damaging toxins, on
medications and on the presence of health problems
commonly associated with lung
disorders.
But
although a medical history and physical exam can be
useful in ruling out certain conditions, they can't
accurately diagnose interstitial lung disease. Instead,
doctors normally rely on tests such
as:
- Chest x-ray.
Although this is often the first test given in cases
of suspected lung problems, a chest X-ray can't
diagnose interstitial lung disease. It can, however,
help eliminate conditions that cause signs and
symptoms similar to those of interstitial lung
disease, including emphysema and a collapsed lobe of
one of the lungs.
- High-resolution
computerized tomography (HRCT) scan. This is the gold
standard imaging test for interstitial lung disease.
Whereas a traditional chest X-ray produces
two-dimensional images of your lungs, a computerized
tomography scan uses an X-ray-sensing unit and a large
computer to create cross-sectional images that are far
more detailed. A high-resolution CT scan goes even
further, showing lung tissue in great detail and
providing more information than conventional CT scans
do.
- Pulmonary function
tests (PFTs). These noninvasive tests check how well
your lungs function. For the test, you're usually
asked to blow into a simple instrument called a
spirometer, which measures how much air your lungs can
hold and the flow of air in and out of your lungs. As
scarring becomes worse, you're able to take less air
in and blow less out. This part of the test takes just
a few minutes. Full PFTs, which give far more
information and take longer, can measure the amount of
gases exchanged across the membrane between your
alveolar wall and capillary membrane.
- Exercise tests.
Because symptoms of interstitial lung disease are
worse when you're active, your doctor may assess your
lung function while you exercise, usually on a
stationary bike or treadmill. Although specific tests
vary, your blood pressure and blood oxygen levels are
usually monitored as the difficulty of the exercise
increases.
- Bronchoscopy
(transbronchial biopsy). In many cases, interstitial
lung disease can be definitively diagnosed only by
examining a small amount of lung tissue (biopsy). In a
transbronchial biopsy, your doctor passes a flexible,
fiber-optic tube (bronchoscope) through your mouth
into your lungs and removes one or more tissue
samples, each about the size of the head of a pin.
These are then examined in a laboratory. Bronchoscopy
is performed on an outpatient basis using local
anesthetic. The most common side effects are sore
throat and hoarseness that may last a few days. More
serious risks include bleeding and collapsed lung
(pneumothorax).
- Bronchoalveolar
lavage. In this procedure, your doctor injects
saltwater (saline) through a bronchoscopeinto a
section of your lung, and then immediately suctions it
out. The withdrawn solution contains cells from the
air sacs. Although bronchoalveolar lavage samples a
larger area of the lung than other procedures do, it
may not provide enough information to diagnosea
specific interstitial lung disease. Instead, doctors
often use it to check the progress of a lung disorder
or to help determine the best treatment.
- Video-assisted
thoracoscopic surgery. When less invasive tests don't
yield a specific diagnosis, a thoracic surgeon may
perform a surgical lung biopsy.In this procedure, a
flexible tube with a camera (endoscope) is
insertedthrough a small incision between your ribs,
allowing the surgeon to view your lungs on a video
monitor. Surgical instruments are then inserted
through another incision, and the surgeon removes
thumbnail-sized tissue samples from two or three sites
in your lungs. Because video-assisted thoracoscopic
surgery allows a surgeon to make small incisions in
your chest wall rather than cut through a rib, you're
likely to have less pain and to heal more quickly than
you are with traditional open lung surgery. Risks of
the procedure include infection, bleeding, an air leak
in the lung wall and pneumonia.
Complications
Scar
tissue formation in your lungs can lead to a series of
increasingly serious complications,
including:
- Low blood oxygen
levels (hypoxemia). Because interstitial lung disease
reduces the amount of oxygen you take in and the
amount that enters your bloodstream, you're likely to
develop lower than normal blood oxygen levels. Lack of
oxygen can disrupt your body's basic functioning, and
severely low levels can be life-threatening.
- High blood pressure
in your lungs (pulmonary hypertension). Unlike
systemic high blood pressure, this condition affects
only the arteries in your lungs. It begins when the
smallest arteries and capillaries are compressed and
obliterated by scar tissue, causing increased
resistance to blood flow in your lungs. This in turn
raises pressure within the pulmonary arteries.
Pulmonary blood pressure can be measured by inserting
a small catheter in the right side of the heart or by
a noninvasive cardiac echo. Pulmonary hypertension is
a serious illness that becomes progressively worse and
that eventually may prove fatal.
- Right-sided heart
failure (cor pulmonale). This serious condition occurs
when your heart's right ventricle — which is less
muscular than the left — has to pump harder than usual
to move blood through obstructed pulmonary arteries.
Initially, your heart tries to compensate for the
increased workload by thickening its walls and
dilating the chamber of the right ventricle to
increase the amount of blood it can hold. But this
measure works only temporarily, and eventually the
right ventricle fails from the extra strain.
- Respiratory
failure. Often the end stage of chronic lung disease,
respiratory failure occurs when blood levels of oxygen
become dangerously low or, as in the case of
emphysema, carbon dioxide levels become excessively
high. Severely low blood oxygen can lead to heart
arrhythmias and unconsciousness and high carbon
dioxide levels to sleepiness and confusion.
Eventually, respiratory failure may prove fatal.
Treatment
Interstitial lung disease caused by
toxins or drugs can sometimes be reversed when you're no
longer exposed to those substances. But in people for
whom this isn't the case, the outlook is less promising.
That's because the drug therapies that are currently
available can have serious side effects and often aren't
effective. Treatments include:
- Corticosteroid
drugs. Although these anti-inflammatory drugs are the
initial treatment of choice, they help only about one
in five people with interstitial lung disease. Those
most likely to benefit have a nonidiopathic disorder
and reversible changes in their lungs. Steroids seldom
improve lung function in people with idiopathic
pulmonary fibrosis, and when they do, the benefits are
usually temporary. In general, you take steroids for
several months until symptoms improve and then you
slowly taper off the medication. If your symptoms
return, your doctor may recommend further steroid
therapy or an immunosuppressive drug such as
azathioprine. Taken for long periods of time or in
large doses, steroids can cause a number of side
effects, including glaucoma, bone loss, high blood
sugar levels leading to diabetes, poor wound healing
and increased susceptibility to infection.
- Cytotoxic drugs.
Azathioprine, which is normally used to prevent organ
rejection after a transplant, and the anti-cancer drug
cyclophosphamide may be used to treat interstitial
lung disease. The drugs are prescribed when steroids
fail to improve symptoms or, increasingly, as a
first-line treatment in combination with steroids.
Cytotoxic drugs can cause severe side effects,
including reduced production of red blood cells, skin
cancer and lymphoma.
- Antifibrotics.
These drugs are used to help reduce the development of
scar tissue. In clinical studies, they showed promise
for slowing the progression of lung damage without
suppressing the immune system, but real-world results
have been disappointing.
- Oxygen therapy.
Depending on the severity of your symptoms and your
activity level, your doctor may recommend oxygen
therapy. Although oxygen can't stop lung damage, it
can make breathing and exercise easier, prevent or
lessencomplications from low blood oxygen levels, and
improve your sleep and sense of well-being. It can
also reduce blood pressure in the right side of your
heart. You're most likely to receive oxygen when you
sleep or exercise, although some people may use it
around the clock. Children with interstitial lung
disease are especially likely to need oxygen therapy.
- Pulmonary
rehabilitation. This is a formal program for people
with chronic lung disease that includes, but goes far
beyond, medical management. The aim of pulmonary
rehabilitation is not only to treat a disease or even
improve daily functioning, but also to help people
with pulmonary fibrosis live full, satisfying lives.
To that end, pulmonary rehabilitation programs focus
on exercise, on teaching you how to breathe more
efficiently, on education, and on emotional support
and nutritional counseling. Most often, this
multifaceted approach requires a team of health care
providers that may include a doctor, nurse,
rehabilitation specialist, dietitian and social
worker.Programs can vary widely, however. Your doctor
can usually tell you about pulmonary rehabilitation
programs in your area. Or contact the American Lung
Association for more information.
- Lung
transplantation. This may be an option for younger
people with severe interstitial lung disease who
aren't likely to benefit from other treatment options.
In order to be considered for a transplant, you must
agree to quit smoking if you smoke, be healthy enough
to undergo surgery and post-transplant treatments, be
willing and able to follow the medical program
outlined by therehabilitation and transplant team, and
have the patience and emotional strength and support
to undergo the wait for a donor organ. The last is
particularly important because donor organs are in
short supply. In general, single-lung transplants are
more successful in people with interstitial lung
disease than double-lung transplants are. And although
many people who receive lung transplants enjoy a good
quality of life, the survival rate is lower than it is
for other types of transplants. What's more, the
anti-rejection drugs you must take for life make you
more susceptible to infection and can increase your
risk of high blood pressure, diabetes and
cancer.
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