Environmental & Occupational Lung Diseases · Reference for Medical Students

🏭 Environmental & Occupational Lung Diseases Pneumoconioses · Inhalational Injuries · High‑Altitude Illness for Medical Students

1. Overview: The Importance of Occupational History

Key Principle A detailed occupational and environmental exposure history is essential for diagnosing many chronic lung diseases. Ask about job title, specific tasks, materials handled, duration of exposure, and use of respiratory protection.

2. Pneumoconioses: Mineral Dust‑Induced Lung Disease

Pneumoconiosis is parenchymal lung disease caused by inhalation and deposition of inorganic mineral dusts, leading to inflammation and fibrosis.

Silicosis

Coal Worker's Pneumoconiosis (CWP)

Asbestosis & Asbestos‑Related Diseases

Berylliosis (Chronic Beryllium Disease)

Other Pneumoconioses

DiseaseExposureKey Features
SiderosisIron oxide dust (welding, foundry)Benign; CXR shows fine nodules, no fibrosis. No symptoms.
StannosisTin oxideBenign; similar to siderosis.
BaritosisBarium sulfateBenign; heavy nodular opacities on CXR.
Hard Metal Lung DiseaseCobalt + tungsten carbide (tool grinding)Giant cell interstitial pneumonia (GIP). Can progress to fibrosis.
TalcosisTalc (cosmetics, rubber, ceramics)Fibrosis similar to asbestosis; talc may contain asbestos.

3. Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis (HP)

Common Syndromes & Exposures

SyndromeAntigen SourceAntigen
Farmer's LungMoldy hay, grainThermophilic actinomycetes (Saccharopolyspora rectivirgula)
Bird Fancier's LungBird droppings, feathersAvian proteins
Humidifier LungContaminated water in humidifiers/ACThermophilic actinomycetes, bacteria, fungi
Hot Tub LungContaminated hot tub waterMycobacterium avium complex (MAC) — non‑infectious, hypersensitivity reaction
Mushroom Worker's LungMushroom compostThermophilic actinomycetes
Chemical HPIsocyanates (paints, foams), anhydridesLow‑molecular‑weight chemicals acting as haptens

Clinical Presentation

Diagnosis

Management

4. Occupational Asthma & Work‑Related Asthma

Types of Occupational Asthma

Common Causative Agents

CategoryExamplesOccupations
High‑Molecular‑Weight (Proteins)Flour, animal dander, latex, enzymesBakers, lab workers, healthcare, detergent industry
Low‑Molecular‑Weight (Chemicals)Isocyanates, anhydrides, wood dust, metals (platinum, nickel, chromium), persulfatesSpray painters, plastics, hairdressers, metal workers

Diagnosis

Management

5. Inhalational Injuries & Toxic Exposures

Smoke Inhalation

Other Toxic Inhalants

AgentSource / OccupationClinical Effects
Chlorine GasIndustrial accidents, mixing bleach + acidUpper airway irritation, bronchospasm, pulmonary edema. Delayed onset possible.
AmmoniaRefrigeration, fertilizer, cleaningSevere mucosal injury, laryngeal edema, bronchiectasis (chronic).
Nitrogen Dioxide (NO₂)Silo Filler's Disease (fermenting silage), welding, combustionBiphasic: initial mild irritation, then severe pulmonary edema 12‑48h later. Diffuse alveolar damage.
PhosgeneChemical manufacturing, welding near chlorinated solventsDelayed pulmonary edema (12‑24h).
Metal Fume FeverWelding galvanized steel (zinc oxide fumes)Self‑limited flu‑like illness 4‑12h after exposure. Resolves within 24‑48h.
Polymer Fume FeverOverheated Teflon (PTFE)Similar to metal fume fever; may cause severe pneumonitis.

6. High‑Altitude Illness

High‑Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE)

Other High‑Altitude Syndromes

7. Diving‑Related Lung Disorders

Pulmonary Barotrauma (Arterial Gas Embolism)

Decompression Sickness (DCS, "The Bends")

8. Other Environmental Lung Diseases

ConditionExposure / CauseKey Features
Air Pollution‑Related DiseaseParticulate matter (PM2.5, PM10), ozone, NO₂, SO₂Exacerbations of asthma/COPD, increased cardiovascular mortality, lung cancer. Long‑term exposure → reduced lung growth in children, accelerated FEV₁ decline.
Radon‑Induced Lung CancerRadon gas (radioactive decay of uranium in soil) accumulating in homesSecond leading cause of lung cancer after smoking. Synergistic with smoking. Testing and mitigation recommended.
ByssinosisCotton, flax, hemp dust (textile workers)"Monday morning chest tightness" — symptoms improve over work week. Due to endotoxin.
BagassosisMoldy sugarcane residueHypersensitivity pneumonitis.
Popcorn Lung (Bronchiolitis Obliterans)Diacetyl (artificial butter flavoring) in microwave popcorn factories, e‑cigarette flavoringsFixed airway obstruction, unresponsive to bronchodilators. Obliterative bronchiolitis on biopsy.

9. Quick Reference: Occupational Lung Disease Pearls

Upper Lobe Predominance

  • Silicosis
  • Coal worker's pneumoconiosis
  • Hypersensitivity pneumonitis (acute/subacute)
  • Sarcoidosis (not occupational)
  • Ankylosing spondylitis

Lower Lobe Predominance

  • Asbestosis
  • IPF / UIP
  • Connective tissue disease‑ILD
  • Chronic aspiration
💡 Eggshell Calcification of Hilar Nodes: Silicosis, Sarcoidosis (rare), Treated lymphoma, Amyloidosis. "Silicosis is #1."
💡 Ferruginous Bodies in Lung Tissue: Asbestos fibers coated with iron‑protein. Confirm asbestos exposure (not diagnostic of asbestosis; also seen in exposed individuals without disease).

🏭 Environmental & Occupational Lung Diseases Reference · High‑yield for medical students, occupational medicine, and pulmonary rotations.
Covers pneumoconioses (silicosis, CWP, asbestosis, berylliosis), hypersensitivity pneumonitis, occupational asthma, inhalational injuries, high‑altitude illness, and diving‑related lung disorders.