đ Environmental & Occupational Lung Diseases Pneumoconioses · Inhalational Injuries · HighâAltitude 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.
- Latency from exposure to disease can be decades (e.g., asbestosis, mesothelioma).
- Concurrent exposures (e.g., smoking + asbestos) can synergistically increase risk.
- Many occupational lung diseases are preventable with proper workplace controls and respiratory protection.
2. Pneumoconioses: Mineral DustâInduced Lung Disease
Pneumoconiosis is parenchymal lung disease caused by inhalation and deposition of inorganic mineral dusts, leading to inflammation and fibrosis.
Silicosis
- Exposure: Inhalation of crystalline silica (quartz). Occupations: sandblasting, mining, stone cutting, foundry work, ceramics, hydraulic fracturing.
- Pathology: Silica particles ingested by alveolar macrophages â inflammasome activation (NALP3) â release of ILâ1ÎČ, TNFâα â fibroblast proliferation and collagen deposition. Silicotic nodules (concentric whorled collagen) in upper lobes.
- Clinical forms:
- Chronic Simple Silicosis: 10â30 years after lowâmoderate exposure. Asymptomatic or mild dyspnea. CXR: small rounded opacities in upper zones.
- Progressive Massive Fibrosis (PMF): Coalescence of nodules into large masses >1 cm. Severe dyspnea, hypoxemia.
- Accelerated Silicosis: 5â10 years after heavy exposure. Rapid progression.
- Acute Silicosis (Silicoproteinosis): Months to <5 years after massive exposure. Alveolar filling with proteinaceous material (PAPâlike). Rapid respiratory failure.
- Complications: Markedly increased risk of tuberculosis (silicotuberculosis) â silica impairs macrophage function. Also increased risk of lung cancer (IARC Group 1), COPD, autoimmune disease (scleroderma, RA).
- Imaging: CXR: upper lobe predominant nodules, "eggshell calcification" of hilar lymph nodes (pathognomonic). CT: centrilobular and subpleural nodules, PMF masses.
- Diagnosis: Compatible exposure history + radiographic findings + exclusion of other causes. Biopsy rarely needed.
- Management: No specific therapy. Remove from exposure, treat complications (TB screening, vaccinations), supportive care. Lung transplant for endâstage.
Coal Worker's Pneumoconiosis (CWP)
- Exposure: Coal dust (carbon). Coal mining, processing.
- Pathology: Coal macules (dustâladen macrophages around respiratory bronchioles) â centrilobular emphysema. PMF can develop.
- Clinical: Often asymptomatic. May progress to PMF with dyspnea, cough, black sputum (melanoptysis).
- Imaging: CXR: small rounded opacities, upper lobe predominance. PMF: large masses.
- Caplan Syndrome: CWP + rheumatoid arthritis â large, rapidly appearing rounded nodules in lung periphery.
- Complications: Increased risk of COPD (chronic bronchitis, emphysema), but no increased risk of lung cancer or TB (unlike silicosis).
- Management: Similar to silicosis; supportive care.
Asbestosis & AsbestosâRelated Diseases
- Exposure: Asbestos fibers (chrysotile, amosite, crocidolite). Occupations: shipbuilding, insulation, construction, brake lining, demolition.
- Pathology: Inhaled fibers reach alveoli â chronic inflammation â interstitial fibrosis (lower lobe predominance). Ferruginous bodies (asbestos fibers coated with ironâprotein) in tissue.
- Spectrum of AsbestosâRelated Disease:
- Pleural Plaques: Benign, discrete fibrous thickening of parietal pleura. Most common manifestation. Often asymptomatic. Not premalignant.
- Benign Asbestos Pleural Effusion: Exudative effusion, often bloody, usually <10 years after exposure.
- Diffuse Pleural Thickening: Extensive visceral pleural fibrosis â restrictive defect.
- Rounded Atelectasis (Folded Lung): Pleuralâbased mass with "comet tail" sign.
- Asbestosis: Parenchymal fibrosis (lower lobe predominant). Latency 15â40 years. Clinical: progressive dyspnea, crackles, clubbing. CXR/CT: reticular opacities, subpleural lines, honeycombing (UIP pattern).
- Lung Cancer: Asbestos is a carcinogen (IARC Group 1). Risk increases synergistically with smoking (multiplicative, not just additive).
- Mesothelioma: Malignant tumor of pleura (or peritoneum). Latency 20â50 years. Not related to smoking. Presents with chest pain, pleural effusion, pleural thickening. Poor prognosis (median survival ~12â18 months).
- Diagnosis: Exposure history + compatible imaging + exclusion of other causes. Biopsy may be needed for mesothelioma or lung cancer.
- Management: No specific therapy for asbestosis. Smoking cessation critical. Mesothelioma: chemotherapy (pemetrexed + cisplatin), immunotherapy, palliative care.
Berylliosis (Chronic Beryllium Disease)
- Exposure: Beryllium metal or salts. Occupations: aerospace, electronics, nuclear weapons, dental alloys.
- Pathophysiology: Type IV hypersensitivity (granulomatous) reaction to beryllium in genetically susceptible individuals (HLAâDPB1 Gluâ¶âč variant). Nonâcaseating granulomas indistinguishable from sarcoidosis.
- Clinical: Dyspnea, cough, fatigue, weight loss. May have extrapulmonary involvement (skin, lymph nodes).
- Diagnosis: Beryllium Lymphocyte Proliferation Test (BeLPT) â blood or BAL lymphocytes proliferate when exposed to beryllium. Confirm with transbronchial biopsy showing nonâcaseating granulomas.
- Management: Remove from exposure. Corticosteroids for symptomatic/progressive disease. Methotrexate or azathioprine as steroidâsparing agents.
Other Pneumoconioses
| Disease | Exposure | Key Features |
| Siderosis | Iron oxide dust (welding, foundry) | Benign; CXR shows fine nodules, no fibrosis. No symptoms. |
| Stannosis | Tin oxide | Benign; similar to siderosis. |
| Baritosis | Barium sulfate | Benign; heavy nodular opacities on CXR. |
| Hard Metal Lung Disease | Cobalt + tungsten carbide (tool grinding) | Giant cell interstitial pneumonia (GIP). Can progress to fibrosis. |
| Talcosis | Talc (cosmetics, rubber, ceramics) | Fibrosis similar to asbestosis; talc may contain asbestos. |
3. Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis (HP)
- Definition: Immuneâmediated interstitial lung disease caused by inhalation of organic antigens (or certain lowâmolecularâweight chemicals) in sensitized individuals.
- Pathophysiology: Type III (immune complex) and Type IV (Tâcell mediated) hypersensitivity.
Common Syndromes & Exposures
| Syndrome | Antigen Source | Antigen |
| Farmer's Lung | Moldy hay, grain | Thermophilic actinomycetes (Saccharopolyspora rectivirgula) |
| Bird Fancier's Lung | Bird droppings, feathers | Avian proteins |
| Humidifier Lung | Contaminated water in humidifiers/AC | Thermophilic actinomycetes, bacteria, fungi |
| Hot Tub Lung | Contaminated hot tub water | Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) â nonâinfectious, hypersensitivity reaction |
| Mushroom Worker's Lung | Mushroom compost | Thermophilic actinomycetes |
| Chemical HP | Isocyanates (paints, foams), anhydrides | Lowâmolecularâweight chemicals acting as haptens |
Clinical Presentation
- Acute HP: Fluâlike illness (fever, chills, myalgia, dyspnea, cough) 4â8 hours after heavy exposure. Resolves within 24â48h with removal.
- Subacute HP: Insidious dyspnea, cough, fatigue, weight loss over weeks to months.
- Chronic HP: Progressive fibrosis, often indistinguishable from IPF/UIP. May occur without recognized acute episodes.
Diagnosis
- High index of suspicion + detailed exposure history.
- HRCT: Centrilobular groundâglass nodules, mosaic attenuation (air trapping on expiratory images), upper lobe predominance. Chronic HP: reticulation, traction bronchiectasis, honeycombing.
- BAL: Lymphocytosis (>20â30%, often >50%), CD4/CD8 ratio variable (often <1 in HP).
- Serum precipitins (IgG antibodies): Suggest exposure, not diagnostic.
- Lung biopsy: Poorly formed nonâcaseating granulomas, bronchiolocentric inflammation, giant cells.
Management
- Antigen avoidance is the cornerstone. May require change of occupation or hobby, or extensive environmental remediation.
- Corticosteroids for symptomatic acute/subacute HP. No proven benefit for chronic fibrotic HP.
- Antifibrotics (nintedanib) approved for progressive fibrosing HP despite antigen avoidance.
4. Occupational Asthma & WorkâRelated Asthma
- Definition: Asthma caused by workplace exposure to a specific agent. Distinct from workâexacerbated asthma (preâexisting asthma worsened by workplace irritants).
- Accounts for ~10â15% of adultâonset asthma.
Types of Occupational Asthma
- Immunologic (Allergic) OA: Sensitization to a workplace agent. Latency period (months to years). IgEâmediated (highâmolecularâweight proteins) or nonâIgE (lowâmolecularâweight chemicals acting as haptens).
- IrritantâInduced OA (Reactive Airways Dysfunction Syndrome â RADS): Acute onset after single highâlevel exposure to irritant gas, fume, or vapor (e.g., chlorine, ammonia, smoke). No latency.
Common Causative Agents
| Category | Examples | Occupations |
| HighâMolecularâWeight (Proteins) | Flour, animal dander, latex, enzymes | Bakers, lab workers, healthcare, detergent industry |
| LowâMolecularâWeight (Chemicals) | Isocyanates, anhydrides, wood dust, metals (platinum, nickel, chromium), persulfates | Spray painters, plastics, hairdressers, metal workers |
Diagnosis
- Objective diagnosis of asthma (spirometry with bronchodilator response, methacholine challenge).
- Establish work relationship: Serial peak expiratory flow (PEF) monitoring at work and away from work (at least 4 readings/day for 2â3 weeks).
- Specific inhalation challenge (gold standard, performed in specialized centers).
- Immunologic testing (skin prick or specific IgE) for select agents.
Management
- Early removal from exposure is the most effective intervention. Complete remission possible if removed early.
- Standard asthma pharmacotherapy (ICS, bronchodilators).
- Workplace modifications (substitution, ventilation, respiratory protection) if removal not possible.
- Workers' compensation implications.
5. Inhalational Injuries & Toxic Exposures
Smoke Inhalation
- Thermal injury: Usually limited to upper airway (due to heat dissipation). Supraglottic edema â stridor, airway obstruction. Early intubation if suspected.
- Chemical injury: Inhalation of products of combustion (carbon monoxide, hydrogen cyanide, aldehydes, acrolein) â tracheobronchitis, bronchospasm, pulmonary edema, ARDS.
- Carbon Monoxide (CO) Poisoning: CO binds hemoglobin with 200â250Ă affinity of Oâ â tissue hypoxia. Symptoms: headache, confusion, coma. Cherryâred skin is a late sign. Diagnosis: elevated carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) on coâoximetry. Standard pulse oximetry is falsely normal. Treatment: 100% Oâ via nonârebreather; hyperbaric Oâ for severe poisoning (COHb >25%, neurologic symptoms, cardiac ischemia).
- Cyanide Poisoning: Product of combustion of synthetic materials (plastics, upholstery). Binds cytochrome oxidase â anaerobic metabolism, lactic acidosis. High anion gap metabolic acidosis, normal PaOâ. Treatment: Hydroxocobalamin (Cyanokit) â binds cyanide to form cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12).
Other Toxic Inhalants
| Agent | Source / Occupation | Clinical Effects |
| Chlorine Gas | Industrial accidents, mixing bleach + acid | Upper airway irritation, bronchospasm, pulmonary edema. Delayed onset possible. |
| Ammonia | Refrigeration, fertilizer, cleaning | Severe mucosal injury, laryngeal edema, bronchiectasis (chronic). |
| Nitrogen Dioxide (NOâ) | Silo Filler's Disease (fermenting silage), welding, combustion | Biphasic: initial mild irritation, then severe pulmonary edema 12â48h later. Diffuse alveolar damage. |
| Phosgene | Chemical manufacturing, welding near chlorinated solvents | Delayed pulmonary edema (12â24h). |
| Metal Fume Fever | Welding galvanized steel (zinc oxide fumes) | Selfâlimited fluâlike illness 4â12h after exposure. Resolves within 24â48h. |
| Polymer Fume Fever | Overheated Teflon (PTFE) | Similar to metal fume fever; may cause severe pneumonitis. |
6. HighâAltitude Illness
HighâAltitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE)
- Nonâcardiogenic pulmonary edema occurring in susceptible individuals ascending rapidly to altitudes >2,500â3,000 meters (8,000â10,000 ft).
- Pathophysiology: Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction â uneven, exaggerated vasoconstriction in some areas â overperfusion of nonâconstricted vessels â capillary stress failure â highâpermeability edema.
- Risk factors: Rapid ascent, history of HAPE, strenuous exertion, respiratory infection, cold.
- Clinical: Dyspnea at rest, cough (initially dry, then pink frothy sputum), crackles, hypoxemia. Usually occurs 2â4 days after ascent.
- Prevention: Gradual ascent (<300â500 m/day above 3,000 m), acetazolamide (prophylaxis not specifically for HAPE but reduces AMS; nifedipine or tadalafil for HAPEâsusceptible individuals).
- Treatment: Descent (at least 500â1,000 m) is definitive. Supplemental Oâ, portable hyperbaric chamber, nifedipine (pulmonary vasodilator), phosphodiesteraseâ5 inhibitors (sildenafil, tadalafil).
Other HighâAltitude Syndromes
- Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS): Headache + nausea, fatigue, dizziness. Occurs within 6â12h of ascent. Treat with rest, descent, acetazolamide, dexamethasone.
- HighâAltitude Cerebral Edema (HACE): Lifeâthreatening; ataxia, confusion, coma. Immediate descent, dexamethasone, Oâ.
7. DivingâRelated Lung Disorders
Pulmonary Barotrauma (Arterial Gas Embolism)
- Overexpansion of lungs during ascent (breathâholding or air trapping) â alveolar rupture â air enters pulmonary veins â systemic arterial gas embolism (AGE).
- Clinical: Sudden onset of neurologic symptoms (strokeâlike), cardiac arrest, loss of consciousness within minutes of surfacing.
- Treatment: Immediate 100% Oâ, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT).
Decompression Sickness (DCS, "The Bends")
- Inert gas (nitrogen) bubbles form in tissues and blood during ascent from depth.
- Type I (mild): Joint pain, skin marbling (cutis marmorata).
- Type II (severe): Neurologic (spinal cord â paraplegia, paresthesia), pulmonary ("chokes" â dyspnea, chest pain, cough).
- Treatment: 100% Oâ, HBOT (recompression).
8. Other Environmental Lung Diseases
| Condition | Exposure / Cause | Key Features |
| Air PollutionâRelated Disease | Particulate matter (PM2.5, PM10), ozone, NOâ, SOâ | Exacerbations of asthma/COPD, increased cardiovascular mortality, lung cancer. Longâterm exposure â reduced lung growth in children, accelerated FEVâ decline. |
| RadonâInduced Lung Cancer | Radon gas (radioactive decay of uranium in soil) accumulating in homes | Second leading cause of lung cancer after smoking. Synergistic with smoking. Testing and mitigation recommended. |
| Byssinosis | Cotton, flax, hemp dust (textile workers) | "Monday morning chest tightness" â symptoms improve over work week. Due to endotoxin. |
| Bagassosis | Moldy sugarcane residue | Hypersensitivity pneumonitis. |
| Popcorn Lung (Bronchiolitis Obliterans) | Diacetyl (artificial butter flavoring) in microwave popcorn factories, eâcigarette flavorings | Fixed 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 diseaseâILD
- Chronic aspiration
đĄ Eggshell Calcification of Hilar Nodes: Silicosis, Sarcoidosis (rare), Treated lymphoma, Amyloidosis. "Silicosis is #1."
đĄ Ferruginous Bodies in Lung Tissue: Asbestos fibers coated with ironâprotein. Confirm asbestos exposure (not diagnostic of asbestosis; also seen in exposed individuals without disease).