đ« Pulmonary Diseases A Comprehensive Reference for Medical Students · Diagnosis & Management
1. Obstructive Lung Diseases
Definition Airflow limitation, especially during expiration. â FEVâ/FVC ratio. TLC â or normal.
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
- Chronic Bronchitis: Productive cough â„3 months/year for â„2 years. Hypertrophy of submucosal glands (Reid index >0.5).
- Emphysema: Permanent enlargement of airspaces distal to terminal bronchioles.
- Centriacinar: Upper lobes, associated with smoking.
- Panacinar: Lower lobes, αââantitrypsin deficiency.
- Paraseptal: Subpleural, risk of spontaneous pneumothorax.
- Clinical: Dyspnea, chronic cough, wheezing. "Pink puffer" (emphysema) vs. "Blue bloater" (chronic bronchitis).
- Diagnosis: Spirometry: FEVâ/FVC <0.70 postâbronchodilator. CXR: hyperinflation, flattened diaphragms, increased retrosternal airspace.
- Management: Smoking cessation, bronchodilators (LAMA/LABA), inhaled corticosteroids (if frequent exacerbations), pulmonary rehabilitation, oxygen if resting PaOâ â€55 mmHg or SpOâ â€88%.
- αââAntitrypsin Deficiency: Earlyâonset panacinar emphysema + liver cirrhosis. PASâpositive globules in hepatocytes. Treatment: augmentation therapy.
Asthma
- Chronic inflammatory disorder with reversible bronchoconstriction. Triggers: allergens, exercise, cold air, URI.
- Pathology: Airway remodeling, smooth muscle hypertrophy, mucus plugging (Curschmann spirals), eosinophils, CharcotâLeyden crystals.
- Diagnosis: Spirometry: â FEVâ/FVC, reversibility (â„12% and â„200 mL increase postâbronchodilator). Peak flow variability. Methacholine challenge.
- Classification (GINA): Intermittent, mild persistent, moderate persistent, severe persistent.
- Management: Stepwise therapy: SABA as needed, lowâdose ICS, LABA, leukotriene modifiers, biologics (omalizumab for allergic asthma).
- Status Asthmaticus: Severe attack unresponsive to initial therapy. Risk factors: normal/high PaCOâ, silent chest, pulsus paradoxus.
Bronchiectasis
- Permanent, irreversible dilation of bronchi due to chronic inflammation/infection.
- Etiology: Cystic fibrosis, postâinfectious (TB, pertussis), allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA), primary ciliary dyskinesia.
- Clinical: Chronic productive cough, largeâvolume purulent sputum, hemoptysis, clubbing.
- Diagnosis: Highâresolution CT (HRCT): "signet ring" sign, tramâtrack opacities.
- Management: Airway clearance, bronchodilators, antibiotics for exacerbations, possible surgery for localized disease.
2. Restrictive Lung Diseases
Definition Reduced lung expansion â â TLC, â FVC, normal or â FEVâ/FVC. Due to intrinsic lung disease (ILD) or extrinsic factors.
Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF)
- Most common idiopathic interstitial pneumonia. Progressive fibrosis, usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP) pattern.
- Clinical: Older adults, insidious dyspnea, dry cough, fine inspiratory crackles ("Velcro"), clubbing.
- Diagnosis: HRCT: subpleural, basal predominance, honeycombing, traction bronchiectasis. Surgical lung biopsy if HRCT not definitive.
- Treatment: Antifibrotics (pirfenidone, nintedanib). Lung transplantation.
Sarcoidosis
- Multisystem granulomatous disease of unknown etiology. Nonâcaseating granulomas.
- Pulmonary: Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy, reticulonodular opacities. Often asymptomatic or Löfgren syndrome (erythema nodosum, arthralgia, BHL).
- Extrapulmonary: Uveitis, lupus pernio, hypercalcemia (â 1αâhydroxylase in macrophages), cardiac involvement.
- Diagnosis: CXR staging (I: BHL only; II: BHL + infiltrates; III: infiltrates only; IV: fibrosis). Elevated ACE level. Tissue biopsy.
- Treatment: Corticosteroids if symptomatic/progressive. Methotrexate, antiâTNF for refractory.
Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis (HP)
- Immuneâmediated reaction to inhaled organic antigens (e.g., bird proteins, moldy hay).
- Types: Acute (fluâlike 4â6h post exposure), subacute, chronic fibrotic.
- Diagnosis: Exposure history, HRCT (centrilobular nodules, mosaic attenuation, air trapping), lymphocytosis on BAL.
- Treatment: Antigen avoidance, corticosteroids.
Pneumoconioses
| Disease | Exposure | CXR/CT Findings | Notes |
| Silicosis | Sandblasting, mining, stone cutting | Upper lobe nodules, eggshell calcification of hilar nodes | â Risk of TB (silica impairs macrophage function) |
| Coal Worker's Pneumoconiosis | Coal dust | Small rounded opacities upper lobes; progressive massive fibrosis | May be asymptomatic; Caplan syndrome (RA + coal nodules) |
| Asbestosis | Shipbuilding, insulation, construction | Lower lobe fibrosis, pleural plaques, rounded atelectasis | â Mesothelioma, lung cancer (synergistic with smoking). Ferruginous bodies. |
| Berylliosis | Aerospace, electronics | Nonâcaseating granulomas (sarcoidâlike) | Diagnosis: lymphocyte proliferation test to beryllium |
Other Restrictive Causes
- Connective Tissue DiseaseâILD: RA (UIP pattern), Scleroderma (NSIP pattern, esophageal dilation), Polymyositis/Dermatomyositis.
- Drugâinduced ILD: Amiodarone, methotrexate, bleomycin, nitrofurantoin.
- Extrinsic Restriction: Obesity, kyphoscoliosis, neuromuscular disease (e.g., ALS, myasthenia gravis).
3. Pulmonary Infections
Pneumonia
- Typical (lobar): Streptococcus pneumoniae (rusty sputum), Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella. Abrupt onset, fever, consolidation.
- Atypical (interstitial): Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae, Legionella. Gradual onset, dry cough, extrapulmonary manifestations (bullous myringitis, hyponatremia with Legionella).
- Aspiration Pneumonia: Anaerobes (Bacteroides, Peptostreptococcus). Dependent lung segments (RLL superior segment, posterior upper lobes).
- HospitalâAcquired / VentilatorâAssociated: Pseudomonas, MRSA, Acinetobacter.
- Immunocompromised: Pneumocystis jirovecii (groundâglass opacities, â LDH, treat with TMPâSMX), CMV, fungal.
- Diagnosis: CXR, sputum culture, blood cultures, urinary antigen (Legionella, Pneumococcus).
Tuberculosis (TB)
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Airborne transmission.
- Primary TB: Ghon focus (lower lobe) + hilar node = Ghon complex. Usually asymptomatic.
- Reactivation TB: Upper lobe cavitary lesions (due to high Oâ tension). Symptoms: night sweats, weight loss, hemoptysis.
- Miliary TB: Hematogenous dissemination, "millet seed" nodules.
- Diagnosis: Interferonâgamma release assay (IGRA) or PPD. Sputum AFB smear, culture, NAAT (GeneXpert).
- Treatment (RIPE): Rifampin, Isoniazid, Pyrazinamide, Ethambutol. Latent TB: Isoniazid or Rifampin.
4. Pulmonary Vascular Diseases
Pulmonary Embolism (PE)
- Thrombus (usually from DVT) obstructing pulmonary arteries.
- Risk factors: Virchow's triad (stasis, hypercoagulability, endothelial injury).
- Clinical: Sudden dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, hemoptysis, tachycardia. Massive PE: hypotension, RV strain.
- Diagnosis: CT pulmonary angiography (gold standard). V/Q scan if renal insufficiency. Wells score, Dâdimer (high sensitivity, low specificity).
- ECG: Sinus tachycardia, S1Q3T3 pattern, right axis deviation.
- Management: Anticoagulation (heparin â warfarin or DOAC). Thrombolytics for massive PE with shock. IVC filter if anticoagulation contraindicated.
Pulmonary Hypertension (PH)
- Mean pulmonary artery pressure â„20 mmHg at rest (right heart cath).
- WHO Groups:
- Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH): idiopathic, heritable, connective tissue disease.
- PH due to left heart disease.
- PH due to lung disease/hypoxia (COPD, ILD).
- Chronic Thromboembolic PH (CTEPH).
- Multifactorial.
- Clinical: Progressive dyspnea, loud P2, right ventricular heave, eventually cor pulmonale.
- Treatment: PAHâspecific: PDE5 inhibitors (sildenafil), endothelin antagonists (bosentan), prostacyclin analogs.
5. Lung Cancer
| Type | Frequency | Location | Associations / Features |
| Adenocarcinoma | Most common (40%) | Peripheral | Nonâsmokers, women. Often with driver mutations (EGFR, ALK, KRAS). |
| Squamous Cell Carcinoma | ~25% | Central (cavitary) | Smoking. May cause hypercalcemia (PTHrP). Keratin pearls. |
| Small Cell Carcinoma | ~15% | Central | Strong smoking association. Neuroendocrine. Paraneoplastic: SIADH, LambertâEaton, Cushing's. Rapid growth, early mets. |
| Large Cell Carcinoma | ~5% | Peripheral | Poor prognosis. |
| Carcinoid Tumor | <5% | Central/Peripheral | Neuroendocrine, lowâgrade. May cause carcinoid syndrome if liver mets. |
Paraneoplastic Syndromes
- SIADH: Small cell.
- Hypercalcemia: Squamous cell (PTHrP).
- LambertâEaton Myasthenic Syndrome: Small cell (antibodies vs. presynaptic VGCC).
- Hypertrophic Osteoarthropathy: Nonâsmall cell (clubbing, periostitis).
Superior Vena Cava Syndrome & Pancoast Tumor
- SVC syndrome: Obstruction â facial swelling, distended neck veins. Emergency (usually small cell or lymphoma).
- Pancoast tumor: Superior sulcus tumor â Horner syndrome (ptosis, miosis, anhidrosis), C8âT1 nerve root involvement (hand weakness).
6. Pleural Diseases
Pleural Effusion
- Transudate vs. Exudate (Light's Criteria):
- Exudate if â„1: Pleural protein/serum protein >0.5; Pleural LDH/serum LDH >0.6; Pleural LDH >â
upper limit normal.
- Transudate causes: Heart failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome.
- Exudate causes: Pneumonia (parapneumonic), malignancy, TB, pulmonary embolism, rheumatoid arthritis.
Pneumothorax
- Primary spontaneous: Tall, thin young males, ruptured apical bleb.
- Secondary spontaneous: COPD, cystic fibrosis, TB, Marfan syndrome.
- Tension pneumothorax: Medical emergency. Tracheal deviation away, hypotension, absent breath sounds. Immediate needle decompression (2nd ICS midclavicular) â chest tube.
Mesothelioma
- Malignant tumor of pleura, strongly associated with asbestos (latency 20â40 years).
- Presents with chest wall pain, pleural effusion, pleural thickening.
- Diagnosis: Pleural biopsy (cytology often insufficient).
7. Respiratory Failure
Type I (Hypoxemic)
- PaOâ <60 mmHg, PaCOâ normal or low.
- Causes: V/Q mismatch, shunt, diffusion impairment, low FiOâ.
- Examples: Pneumonia, ARDS, pulmonary edema.
Type II (Hypercapnic)
- PaCOâ >45 mmHg, often with hypoxemia.
- Causes: Hypoventilation (CNS depression, neuromuscular, COPD).
- Examples: Opiate overdose, myasthenia gravis, severe COPD.
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)
- Diffuse alveolar damage, nonâcardiogenic pulmonary edema.
- Berlin Definition: Acute onset, bilateral opacities, PaOâ/FiOâ â€300 mmHg on PEEP â„5, not fully explained by cardiac failure.
- Pathophysiology: Injury to alveolar epithelium and endothelium â increased permeability â proteinârich edema, hyaline membranes.
- Management: Treat underlying cause, lungâprotective ventilation (low tidal volume 6 mL/kg ideal body weight), conservative fluid strategy, prone positioning for severe cases.
Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA)
- Recurrent upper airway collapse during sleep â apneas/hypopneas.
- Risk factors: Obesity, retrognathia, large neck circumference.
- Diagnosis: Polysomnography (apneaâhypopnea index, AHI).
- Complications: Hypertension, atrial fibrillation, pulmonary hypertension, daytime somnolence.
- Treatment: CPAP, weight loss, oral appliances.
8. HighâYield Comparisons & Mnemonics
| Condition | Key Differentiator |
| COPD vs. Asthma | COPD: irreversible obstruction, older age, smoking. Asthma: reversible, younger, atopy. |
| Transudate vs. Exudate | Light's criteria. Transudate = low protein/LDH (CHF, cirrhosis). |
| Silicosis vs. Asbestosis | Silicosis: upper lobe nodules, eggshell calcification. Asbestosis: lower lobe fibrosis, pleural plaques. |
| Small Cell vs. NonâSmall Cell | Small cell: central, neuroendocrine, early mets, paraneoplastic (SIADH, LEMS). |
| TB primary vs. reactivation | Primary: Ghon complex (lower lobe). Reactivation: upper lobe cavitation. |
đĄ MUDPILES â High anion gap metabolic acidosis (Methanol, Uremia, DKA, Propylene glycol, Isoniazid, Lactic acidosis, Ethylene glycol, Salicylates).
đĄ RIPE â TB treatment: Rifampin, Isoniazid, Pyrazinamide, Ethambutol.
9. Essential Imaging Patterns
| Finding | Likely Diagnosis |
| Upper lobe cavitary lesion | Reactivation TB, squamous cell carcinoma, fungal (aspergilloma) |
| Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy | Sarcoidosis, TB, lymphoma, silicosis (eggshell) |
| Pleural plaques | Asbestos exposure |
| Honeycombing, basal predominance | IPF (UIP pattern) |
| Groundâglass opacities, crazy paving | PJP, ARDS, pulmonary edema, hypersensitivity pneumonitis |
| Hyperinflation, flattened diaphragms | COPD / Emphysema |
| Miliary nodules | Miliary TB, metastatic cancer, fungal |