Pulmonary Diseases · Comprehensive Reference for Medical Students

đŸ« Pulmonary Diseases A Comprehensive Reference for Medical Students · Diagnosis & Management

1. Obstructive Lung Diseases

Definition Airflow limitation, especially during expiration. ↓ FEV₁/FVC ratio. TLC ↑ or normal.

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)

Asthma

Bronchiectasis

2. Restrictive Lung Diseases

Definition Reduced lung expansion → ↓ TLC, ↓ FVC, normal or ↑ FEV₁/FVC. Due to intrinsic lung disease (ILD) or extrinsic factors.

Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF)

Sarcoidosis

Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis (HP)

Pneumoconioses

DiseaseExposureCXR/CT FindingsNotes
SilicosisSandblasting, mining, stone cuttingUpper lobe nodules, eggshell calcification of hilar nodes↑ Risk of TB (silica impairs macrophage function)
Coal Worker's PneumoconiosisCoal dustSmall rounded opacities upper lobes; progressive massive fibrosisMay be asymptomatic; Caplan syndrome (RA + coal nodules)
AsbestosisShipbuilding, insulation, constructionLower lobe fibrosis, pleural plaques, rounded atelectasis↑ Mesothelioma, lung cancer (synergistic with smoking). Ferruginous bodies.
BerylliosisAerospace, electronicsNon‑caseating granulomas (sarcoid‑like)Diagnosis: lymphocyte proliferation test to beryllium

Other Restrictive Causes

3. Pulmonary Infections

Pneumonia

Tuberculosis (TB)

4. Pulmonary Vascular Diseases

Pulmonary Embolism (PE)

Pulmonary Hypertension (PH)

5. Lung Cancer

TypeFrequencyLocationAssociations / Features
AdenocarcinomaMost common (40%)PeripheralNon‑smokers, 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%CentralStrong smoking association. Neuroendocrine. Paraneoplastic: SIADH, Lambert‑Eaton, Cushing's. Rapid growth, early mets.
Large Cell Carcinoma~5%PeripheralPoor prognosis.
Carcinoid Tumor<5%Central/PeripheralNeuroendocrine, low‑grade. May cause carcinoid syndrome if liver mets.

Paraneoplastic Syndromes

Superior Vena Cava Syndrome & Pancoast Tumor

6. Pleural Diseases

Pleural Effusion

Pneumothorax

Mesothelioma

7. Respiratory Failure

Type I (Hypoxemic)

  • PaO₂ <60 mmHg, PaCO₂ normal or low.
  • Causes: V/Q mismatch, shunt, diffusion impairment, low FiO₂.
  • Examples: Pneumonia, ARDS, pulmonary edema.

Type II (Hypercapnic)

  • PaCO₂ >45 mmHg, often with hypoxemia.
  • Causes: Hypoventilation (CNS depression, neuromuscular, COPD).
  • Examples: Opiate overdose, myasthenia gravis, severe COPD.

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA)

8. High‑Yield Comparisons & Mnemonics

ConditionKey Differentiator
COPD vs. AsthmaCOPD: irreversible obstruction, older age, smoking. Asthma: reversible, younger, atopy.
Transudate vs. ExudateLight's criteria. Transudate = low protein/LDH (CHF, cirrhosis).
Silicosis vs. AsbestosisSilicosis: upper lobe nodules, eggshell calcification. Asbestosis: lower lobe fibrosis, pleural plaques.
Small Cell vs. Non‑Small CellSmall cell: central, neuroendocrine, early mets, paraneoplastic (SIADH, LEMS).
TB primary vs. reactivationPrimary: Ghon complex (lower lobe). Reactivation: upper lobe cavitation.
💡 MUDPILES – High anion gap metabolic acidosis (Methanol, Uremia, DKA, Propylene glycol, Isoniazid, Lactic acidosis, Ethylene glycol, Salicylates).
💡 RIPE – TB treatment: Rifampin, Isoniazid, Pyrazinamide, Ethambutol.

9. Essential Imaging Patterns

FindingLikely Diagnosis
Upper lobe cavitary lesionReactivation TB, squamous cell carcinoma, fungal (aspergilloma)
Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathySarcoidosis, TB, lymphoma, silicosis (eggshell)
Pleural plaquesAsbestos exposure
Honeycombing, basal predominanceIPF (UIP pattern)
Ground‑glass opacities, crazy pavingPJP, ARDS, pulmonary edema, hypersensitivity pneumonitis
Hyperinflation, flattened diaphragmsCOPD / Emphysema
Miliary nodulesMiliary TB, metastatic cancer, fungal

đŸ« Pulmonary Diseases Reference — High‑yield for medical students, USMLE, and clinical rotations.
Includes obstructive, restrictive, infectious, vascular, neoplastic, and pleural diseases with key diagnostic and management pearls.