Sarcoidosis
Sarcoidosis is a systemic disease of unknown etiology characterized by abnormal T cell function and noncaseating granulomas found diffusely throughout the body. It occurs most commonly in the third and fourth decades, is slightly more likely in women, and is approximately ten times more frequent in black people in the United States.
Most of the dysfunction associated with sarcoidosis results from the physical presence of the granulomas in the tissues, although systemic signs of inflammation may also be present. Organs commonly involved include the lungs, skin, lymph nodes, liver, spleen, eyes, joints, central nervous system, and muscle . The presenting symptoms are quite variable, although in the United States 50 per cent of patients will present with pulmonary disease, 25 per cent with constitutional symptoms, and 7 per cent with extrapulmonary involvement, and the remainder are asymptomatic and disease is discovered during routine examination.
Diagnosis depends on the finding of noncaseating granulomata in the setting of a characteristic clinical picture with typical radiographic findings, in the absence of another specific cause of granulomatous disease, such as tuberculosis, fungal disease, carcinoma, and lymphoma. Histological confirmation is most commonly obtained by a transbronchial biopsy during bronchoscopy. Conventional chest x-ray staging is as follows; stage O, normal film, stage 1, bilateral hilar adenopathy; stage 2, adenopathy plus pulmonary infiltrates; and, stage 3, pulmonary infiltrates alone. There is no evidence that staging has anv relationship to the natural progression of disease. Rarely, the x-ray may show multiple nodules similar to those seen with a metastatic tumor or a pleural effusion. Nonspecific laboratory abnormalities include hypercalcemia, anemia, hypergammaglobulinemia, and an elevated angioten-sin-converting enzyme level. Skin test anergy is usually present in association with lymphopenia and decreased number and function of peripheral blood T cells.
The disorder is usually self-limited, with complete resolution of symptoms and chest x-ray changes within a year or two. A minority have a persistent mild abnormality with some fibrotic changes on chest x-ray. Approximately 10 per cent develop severe progressive disease with progressive pulmonary fibrosis or significant extrapulmonary involvement.
Because of the self-limiting nature of the disease, treatment is usually reserved for patients with significant symptomatic abnormalities of pulmonary function and with granulomas in the eye or central nervous system, where scarring will lead to significant problems. Corticosteroids are quite effective in ameliorating the acute granulomatous inflammation, but their efficacy in altering the long-term prognosis is unproven.
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