Pathologic changes are found in the lung or pleura in many systemic autoimmune diseases, although clinical manifestations may not always be present. 10Colby T.V. Lung Pathology The Lung in Rheumatic Diseases New York: Marcel Dekker (1990).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 13Colby T.V., Carrington C.B. Interstitial Lung Disease Pathology of the Lung : Thieme Medical Publishers (1995).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références Changes related to the underlying disease have to be separated from changes caused by therapy, such as drug reactions and opportunistic infections. 10Colby T.V. Lung Pathology The Lung in Rheumatic Diseases New York: Marcel Dekker (1990).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 13Colby T.V., Carrington C.B. Interstitial Lung Disease Pathology of the Lung : Thieme Medical Publishers (1995).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références Intercurrent disease processes unrelated to the systemic autoimmune disease can also be a problem.
Measurable evidence of thoracopulmonary lung disease in asymptomatic patients with systemic autoimmune diseases is relatively common and may take the form of abnormal pulmonary function testing, bronchoalveolar lavage findings, or radiologic changes. 13Colby T.V., Carrington C.B. Interstitial Lung Disease Pathology of the Lung : Thieme Medical Publishers (1995).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références In general, the histologic correlates of these subclinical abnormalities are not well-characterized.
This article reviews the well-documented pathologic changes associated with clinically recognized pleuropulmonary involvement in systemi autoimmune diseases. 5Capron F. Pulmonary hemorrhage syndromes Spencer's Pathology of the Lung New York: McGraw-Hill (1996).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 8Churg C. Churg-Strauss Syndrome Pathology of the Lung New York: Thieme (1995).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 10Colby T.V. Lung Pathology The Lung in Rheumatic Diseases New York: Marcel Dekker (1990).
145-178
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 11Colby T.V. Anatomic Distribution and Histopathologic Patterns in Interstitial Lung Disease Interstitial Lung Disease Philadelphia: BC Decker (1998).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 13Colby T.V., Carrington C.B. Interstitial Lung Disease Pathology of the Lung : Thieme Medical Publishers (1995).
589-737
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 18DeRemee R.A., Colby T.V. Wegener's granulomatosis Pathology of the Lung New York: Thieme Medical Publishers (1995).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 34Lie J.T. Rheumatic connective tissue diseases Pulmonary Pathology New York: Springer (1994).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 35Lie J.T. Pulmonary involvement in collagen vascular disorders Pathology of Pulmonary Disease Philadelphia: JB Lippincott (1994).
781-790
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 36Lie J.T. Pulmonary involvement in systemic vasculitides Pathology of Pulmonary Disease Philadelphia: JB Lippincott (1994).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 40Miller R.R. Diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage Pathology of the Lung New York: Thieme (1995).
365-373
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 46Roberts T., Colby T.V. Noninfectious necrotizing granulomatous disorders Spencer's Pathology of the Lung New York: McGraw-Hill (1997).
835-864
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 55Travis W.D., Koss M.N. Pulmonary angitis and granulomatosis. Necrotizing sarcoid granulomatosis in Churg-Strauss syndrome Pathology of Pulmonary Disease Philadelphia: JB Lippincott (1994).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 56Travis W.D., Koss M.N. Vasculitis Pulmonary Pathology New York: Springer (1994).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 57Travis W.D., Koss M.N., Ferrans B.J. The lung in connective tissue disorders Spencer's Pathology of the Lung, ed 5. New York: McGraw-Hill (1997).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références Among the collagen-vascular diseases, the pathologic changes are grouped according to pleuropulmonary compartments: pleura, airway, alveolar/parenchymal, vascular, and other, recognizing that in individual cases there is overlap among lesions affecting more than one compartment, resulting in a variety of clinical and histologic manifestations.
Because many of the systemic autoimmune diseases represent chronic inflammatory processes, they may be complicated by conditions associated with chronic inflammatory conditions in general, such as secondary pulmonary amyloidosis. 13Colby T.V., Carrington C.B. Interstitial Lung Disease Pathology of the Lung : Thieme Medical Publishers (1995).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 57Travis W.D., Koss M.N., Ferrans B.J. The lung in connective tissue disorders Spencer's Pathology of the Lung, ed 5. New York: McGraw-Hill (1997).
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The histopathologic changes in the systemic autoimmune diseases are rarely diagnostic, and in most instances only nonspecific histologic reaction patterns are identified. 10Colby T.V. Lung Pathology The Lung in Rheumatic Diseases New York: Marcel Dekker (1990).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 13Colby T.V., Carrington C.B. Interstitial Lung Disease Pathology of the Lung : Thieme Medical Publishers (1995).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 23Haupt H.M., Moore G.W., Hutchins G.M. The lung in systemic lupus erythematosus: Analysis of the pathologic change in 120 patients Am J Med 1981 ; 71 : 791-798 [cross-ref]
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références The following definitions and associated figures describe and illustrate the more common reaction patterns. 9Colby T.V., Churg A.C. Patterns of pulmonary fibrosis Pathol Annu 1986 ; 21 (Part 2) : 277-310
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 10Colby T.V. Lung Pathology The Lung in Rheumatic Diseases New York: Marcel Dekker (1990).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 12Colby T.V., Specks U. Wegener's Granulomatosis in the 1990s: A Pulmonary Pathologist's Perspective The Lung: Current Concepts Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins (1993).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 13Colby T.V., Carrington C.B. Interstitial Lung Disease Pathology of the Lung : Thieme Medical Publishers (1995).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 14Colby T.V., Swensen S.J. Anatomic distribution of and histopathologic patterns in diffuse lung disease: Correlation with HRCT J Thorac Imaging 1996 ; 11 : 1-26 [cross-ref]
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 15Colby T.V. Bronchiolitis: Pathology considerations Am J Clin Pathol 1998 ; 109 : 101-109
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 41Myers J.L., Colby T.V. Bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia and constrictive bronchiolitis: Comparative analysis of two distinct entities Progress in Surgical Pathology XII Philadelphia: Field & Wood (1992).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 57Travis W.D., Koss M.N., Ferrans B.J. The lung in connective tissue disorders Spencer's Pathology of the Lung, ed 5. New York: McGraw-Hill (1997).
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Pleuritis. Pleural involvement in the collagen vascular diseases may show any of the following patterns: acute fibrinous pleuritis, organizing fibrinous pleuritis with fibroblastic proliferation, pleural fibrosis, and variable degrees of inflammation (primarily chronic) with occasional germinal centers. Marked acute inflammation may be seen, but infection should first be considered in such cases.
Bronchitis/Bronchiolitis. This refers to inflammation of the airways in which the descriptor “cellular bronchiolitis” may be used to denote cases that have a prominent inflammatory cell infiltrate.
Follicular Bronchiolitis. Cellular bronchiolitis in which lymphoid follicles with reactive germinal centers are a prominent feature is termed follicular bronchiolitis(Figure 1).
Constrictive Bronchiolitis. The most common morphologic correlate of the clinical syndrome of bronchiolitis obliterans (airflow obstruction caused by pathology in the small airways) is constrictive bronchiolitis. Changes include bronchiolar mural thickening, muscular hypertrophy, concentric luminal narrowing caused by submucosal scarring, focal ectasia (often with mucostasis), and (in most severely affected airways) complete luminal loss and replacement by fibrous tissue (Figure 2).
Bronchiolitis Obliterans with Organizing Pneumonia (BOOP Pattern). Polypoid connective tissue found in bronchioles (bronchiolitis obliterans with intraluminal polyps) with extension into the distal parenchyma (organizing pneumonia) is termed bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia. Common accompanying changes include type 2 cell proliferation, mild interstitial inflammation, and increase in foamy alveolar macrophages. The background lung architecture is generally intact(Figure 3).
The unmodified term bronchiolitis obliterans is avoided in this article because it has been used in the literature to denote constrictive bronchiolitis as well as the changes seen in bronchiolitis obliterans with intraluminal polyps (as part of a BOOP pattern).
Alveolar Hemorrhage(clinically alveolar hemorrhage syndrome). Alveolar hemorrhage is defined below.
Diffuse Alveolar Damage (DAD). DAD is a reaction pattern of acute lung injury that typically manifests as adult respiratory distress syndrome 25Katzenstein A-LA Acute lung injury patterns: Diffuse alveolar damage in bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia Katzenstein and Askin's Surgical Pathology of Non-neoplastic Lung Disease Philadelphia: WB Saunders (1997).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 26Katzenstein A.L.A. Idiopathic interstitial pneumonia Katzenstein and Askin's Surgical Pathology of Non-neoplastic Lung Disease Philadelphia: WB Saunders (1997).
48-80
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références; in early phases, there is interstitial and alveolar edema and hyaline membranes(Figure 4)A and B). As the hyaline membranes resolve, type 2 cells proliferate and there may be airspace organization and interstitial widening with edema and organization (Figure 4C). The lesion may entirely resolve or leave behind a residue of scarring of variable severity.
Usual Interstitial Pneumonia (UIP). UIP is a pattern of fibrosing interstitial pneumonia characteristically associated with honeycomb change, the latter representing architecturally destroyed lung tissue. 25Katzenstein A-LA Acute lung injury patterns: Diffuse alveolar damage in bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia Katzenstein and Askin's Surgical Pathology of Non-neoplastic Lung Disease Philadelphia: WB Saunders (1997).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 26Katzenstein A.L.A. Idiopathic interstitial pneumonia Katzenstein and Askin's Surgical Pathology of Non-neoplastic Lung Disease Philadelphia: WB Saunders (1997).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références UIP is typically patchy, and zones of active fibroplasia are identified as tufts of fibroblasts adjacent to the more severely fibrotic tissue (Figure 5). The changes are often accentuated in subpleural and paraseptal regions.
Cellular Interstitial Pneumonia. This is a descriptive term for a common pattern of mild diffuse cellular interstitial infiltrates of chronic inflammatory cells that are less dense than those seen in lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia.
Lymphocytic Interstitial Pneumonia (LIP). LIP is a reaction pattern that includes dense diffuse polymorphous (and polyclonal) lymphoid infiltrate at one end of the spectrum and diffuse lymphoid hyperplasia at the other (Figure 6 and Figure 7. 27Koss M.N. Pulmonary lymphoproliferative disorders. Chapter 7 The Lung: Current Concepts Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins (1993).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références In diffuse lymphoid hyperplasia, lymphoid follicles with reactive germinal centers are distributed along lymphatic routes (bronchovascular bundles, septa, and pleura).
Pulmonary Hypertension. There is a constellation of pathologic changes identified in the pulmonary arteries that generally correlate with increased pulmonary artery pressures.58Wagenvoort C.A., Wagenvoort N. Pathology of Pulmonary Hypertension New York: John Wiley & Sons (1977).
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Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références In mild cases, these include muscular hypertrophy and mild intimal thickening (Figure 8A); whereas severe cases are associated with marked intimal fibroplasia (Figure 8B), vasculitis with fibrinoid necrosis (Figure 8C), and plexiform lesions (Figure 8D and E) in which vascular damage results in a tangled plexus of abnormal thin-walled vessels. Thrombotic microangiopathy with fibrin thrombi in vessels may be a complicating feature in cases of pulmonary hypertension. 51Sommerfeld D.L., Brennan D.C., Gordon J.A. Thrombotic microangiopathy: A case report and review of the literature J Am Soc Nephrol 1992 ; 3 : 35-41
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Vasculitis. Inflammation of vessels with mural infiltrates of inflammatory cells is seen in cases of vasculitis; necrosis may be focal and granulomatous (as is typical in Wegener's granulomatosis [WG]) or fibrinoid. 8Churg C. Churg-Strauss Syndrome Pathology of the Lung New York: Thieme (1995).
425-436
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 11Colby T.V. Anatomic Distribution and Histopathologic Patterns in Interstitial Lung Disease Interstitial Lung Disease Philadelphia: BC Decker (1998).
31-50
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 18DeRemee R.A., Colby T.V. Wegener's granulomatosis Pathology of the Lung New York: Thieme Medical Publishers (1995).
401
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 36Lie J.T. Pulmonary involvement in systemic vasculitides Pathology of Pulmonary Disease Philadelphia: JB Lippincott (1994).
811-817
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 40Miller R.R. Diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage Pathology of the Lung New York: Thieme (1995).
365-373
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 46Roberts T., Colby T.V. Noninfectious necrotizing granulomatous disorders Spencer's Pathology of the Lung New York: McGraw-Hill (1997).
835-864
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 55Travis W.D., Koss M.N. Pulmonary angitis and granulomatosis. Necrotizing sarcoid granulomatosis in Churg-Strauss syndrome Pathology of Pulmonary Disease Philadelphia: JB Lippincott (1994).
803-810
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références, 56Travis W.D., Koss M.N. Vasculitis Pulmonary Pathology New York: Springer (1994).
1027-1096
Cliquez ici pour aller à la section Références The composition of the inflammatory infiltrate varies; neutrophils and histiocytes/monocytes typically predominate, although eosinophils are prominent in Churg-Strauss syndrome and lymphocytes predominate in cases of lymphocytic vasculitis.
The aforementioned descriptions refer primarily to histopathologic findings. They may or may not have a clinical correlate. For example, pathologic changes in bronchioles may be an incidental histologic finding or may be associated with clinical evidence of restrictive (and obstructive) lung disease. Some cases of cellular bronchiolitis manifest as interstitial lung disease radiologically with a reticulonodular or micronodular pattern. Lesions affecting the alveolar/parenchymal compartment typically are usually associated with interstitial lung disease, although in some cases they may be subclinical. Similarly, pulmonary arterial changes suggesting pulmonary hypertension may or may not be associated with clinical evidence of pulmonary vascular disease.
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