DIFFUSE ALVEOLAR HEMORRHAGE
Diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage is one of the conditions in the
differential of acute diffuse alveolar pattern on CXR.
Clinical Picture
- Patients present with acute
onset of shortness of breath and cough.
- Hemoptysis may or may not be
present.
- Chest x-ray shows diffuse
alveolar pulmonary infiltrates.
- tachypnea with bilateral
crackles can be heard on physical exam.
- Blood gases show hypoxia with
widened A-a gradient and alveolar hyperventilation.
Etiology
Multiple etiologies can give rise to pulmonary hemorrhage. Following are
the common.
- Thrombocytopenia
- Goodpasture's syndrome
- Wegener's granulomatosis
- Systemic lupus erythematosis
- Idiopathic pulmonary
hemorrhage
Pathology
Alveolar spaces are filled with blood. Lung is heavy and feels consolidated. rest of the
findings will depend on the etiology.
Diagnosis
- Constellation of hemoptysis,
diffuse alveolar infiltrates on CXR, unexplained drop in
hemoglobin usually raises suspicion for pulmonary hemorrhage.
- If PFT can be done, increase
in diffusion capacity can be seen due to sequestration of blood
in lungs.
- Bronchoalveolar alveolar
lavage will show RBC's and Iron stain is positive in
macrophages.
Treatment
- Supportive care.
- Appropriate therapy based on
the etiology.
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