Miscellaneous
Pulmonary histiocytosis X, or eosinophilic granuloma of the lung, is a relatively benign disease presenting with dyspnea and x-ray evidence of diffuse nodular or reticulonodular infiltrates with relative sparing of the lung bases. It should be suspected in patients in the third and fourth decades presenting with diffusely abnormal chest x-rays. It is easy to confuse with sarcoidosis, although pneumothorax or honeycombing on the chest x-ray and the rarity of hilar adenopathy favor histiocytosis X. Diagnosis is made pathologically, treatment is uncertain, and spontaneous remissions are common.
The lymphocytic infiltrative disorders include lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia and immu-noblastic lymphadenopathy, among other specific entities. They differ from other interstitial lung diseases by their common association with dys-proteinemia and frequent progression to lymphoid malignancy.
Pulmonary alveolar proteinosis is a rare, idiopathic disease in which the alveoli become filled with a proteinaceous material rich in lipids. Most patients recover spontaneously, but total lung lavage is necessary when diffuse involvement causes severe hypoxemia. These patients are particularly prone to infection with Nocardia, and less so to Aspergillus and Cryptococcus.
- Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis
- OBLITERATIVE OR OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- DIFFUSE INFILTRATIVE DISEASES OF THE LUNG
- HYPERKINETIC PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- Pulmonary Vasculitis
- Pulmonary Hemorrhagic Disorders
- TREATMENT
- SPECIFIC ENTITIES - DISEASES WITH KFiOWIi ETIOLOGIES -
- Miscellaneous
- CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
- DIFFUSE LUNG DISEASE OF UNKNOWN ETIOLOGY
- CAUSES OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- EFFECTS OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION ON PULMONARY FUNCTION
- Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis
- POSTCAPILLARY PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- Other Clearly Extrinsic Causes of Diffuse Infiltrative Lung Disease
- Pulmonary Infiltrates with Eosinophilia PIE
- PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION ON CARDIAC FUNCTION
- Sarcoidosis
- EMBOLIC DISEASE
- CLINICAL FEATURES OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION