CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
The spectrum of clinical presentation in this group of disorders is as varied as the conditions themselves. The majority of patients present with an insidious onset of dyspnea, exercise limitation, and a dry, nonproductive cough. Certain historical features may suggest a specific diagnosis as detailed in the discussion of each entity. Examination of the chest characteristically reveals mid to late inspiratory crackles and tachypnea. Physical findings of pulmonary hypertension, cor pulmonale, and cyanosis are usually late findings. Evidence of extrathoracic disease is valuable in suggesting a specific diagnosis, such as the skin lesions of sarcoidosis or the arthritis of a collagen-vascular disease. The chest x-ray may confirm the presence of diffuse infiltrative disease but is rarely diagnostic on its own.
The physiological consequences depend on the proportion of lung involved and the speed with which the infiltration develops. As fibrosis replaces normal lung structures, there is a decrease in all lung volumes, a fall in lung compliance, and a decline in the diffusing capacity. The loss of alveolar space and airway abnormalities produce ventilation-perfusion inequality, but hypoxemia is usually mild until the disease progresses to a significant degree and hypercapriia is uncommon.
A specific diagnosis, when not clear from the presentation, depends on lung biopsy findings. In certain diseases, such as sarcoidosis, sufficient tissue can be obtained using a fiberoptic bronchoscope and a transbronchial biopsy, but this may be insufficient in others, such as idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and an open lung biopsy may be required.
- SMOKING CESSATION
- AV JUNCTIONAL RHYTHM DISTURBANCES
- Renal Artery Occlusion
- Management
- CHIP Perinatal Coverage
- MEDICAL MANAGEMENT OF ANGINA
- MEDIASTINAL DISEASE
- CLINICAL PRESENTATION
- Gardner's Syndrome
- TRAMSPLATTTATION
- Pulmonary Infiltrates with Eosinophilia PIE
- Outcomes of Dialysis
- Diagnosis
- Phenytoin
- PROGNOSIS
- Proliferative Glomerulonephritis
- THE ZOLLINGER-ELLISON SYNDROME
- Hepatic Diseases
- Nephritic Glomerulopathies
- RESPIRATORY SENSORS
- MICROSCOPIC ANATOMY
- GENERAL SURGERY IN THE PATIENT WITH HEART DISEASE
- RENAL PARENCHYMAL
- CIRCULATORY PHYSIOLOGY
- CHROMC BROriCMITIS
- POLYPS OF THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT
- C. MALABSORPTION
- CARDIOVASCULAR PHYSIOLOGY DURING PREGNANCY - ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY
- Metabolism of Drugs in Patients with Renal Insufficiency
- Progressive Crescentic Glomerulonephritis
- Visceral Angiography
- Blood Chemistries
- Lidocaine
- PULMOIIARY FUNCTION EVALUATION
- PRE-EXCITATIOIi SYNDROMES