A fibrotic lung disease that primarily affects the small conducting
airways and spares most of the interstitium.
1. Pathology: epithelial
injury with a repair process causing an excessive proliferation of granulation
tissue which compromises or completely obliterates the airway lumen.
2. Physiology: obstructive or
restrictive ventilatory defect.
3. CXR: airspace and/or
interstitial changes.
Bronchiolitis obliterans of known etiology
1. Toxic Fume Inhalation
(S02, N02, NH3)
a. Steroids occasionally
helpful.
2. Postinfectious
Bronchiolitis Obliterans
a. RSV most common cause
in infants and young children.
b. Mycoplasma,
legionella and several viruses most common cause in adults.
Bronchiolitis obliterans of unknown etiology
1. Bronchiolitis
Obliterans and Organizing Pneumonia
a. Also known as BOOP.
b. Steroids effective.
2. Connective Tissue
Disease
a. Rheumatoid arthritis,
systemic lupus, polymyositis and dermatomyositis, Sjogren's syndrome.
3. Organ Transplantation
a. Bone marrow
transplantation
- May occur in 10% of long-term survivors.
- May occur in 10% of long-term survivors.
b. Heart/Lung
transplantation
- May occur in 30-50% of long-term survivors.
- May occur in 30-50% of long-term survivors.
4. Associated with other
disease
a. IPF
b. Hypersensitivity
pneumonitis
c. Eosinophilc granuloma
d. Chronic eosinophilic
pneumonia.
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