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1.
J. bras. pneumol ; J. bras. pneumol;50(4): e20240110, 2024. tab, graf
Artículo en Inglés | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1575171

RESUMEN

ABSTRACT Drug-induced lung disease (DILD) encompasses a broad, highly heterogeneous group of conditions that may occur as a result of exposure to numerous agents, such as antineoplastic drugs, conventional or biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, antiarrhythmics, and antibiotics. Between 3% and 5% of prevalent cases of interstitial lung diseases are reported as DILDs. The pathogenesis of lung injury in DILD is variable, multifactorial, and often unknown. Acute presentation is the most common, can occur from days to months after the start of treatment, and ranges from asymptomatic to acute respiratory failure. The CT patterns are varied and include ground-glass opacities, organizing pneumonia, and diffuse alveolar damage. Notably, there are no clinical manifestations or CT patterns specific to DILD, which makes the diagnosis quite challenging and necessitates a high index of suspicion, as well as the exclusion of alternative causes such as infection, cardiac-related pulmonary edema, exacerbation of a preexisting ILD, and neoplastic lung involvement. Discontinuation of the offending medication constitutes the cornerstone of treatment, and corticosteroid treatment is usually necessary after the onset of clinical manifestations. The prognosis varies widely, with high mortality rates in severe cases. A history of medications related to pulmonary toxicity in patients with new-onset respiratory symptoms should prompt consideration of DILD as a potential underlying cause.

3.
J. bras. pneumol ; J. bras. pneumol;49(1): e20220466, 2023. tab, graf
Artículo en Inglés | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1421963

RESUMEN

ABSTRACT Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune inflammatory and heterogeneous disease that affects several systems, especially the joints. Among the extra-articular manifestations of RA, pleuropulmonary involvement occurs frequently, with different presentations, potentially in all anatomic thoracic compartments, and may determine high morbidity and mortality. The most common pleuropulmonary manifestations in patients with RA include interstitial lung disease (ILD), pleural disease, pulmonary arterial hypertension, rheumatoid lung nodules, airway disease (bronchiectasis and bronchiolitis), and lymphadenopathy. Pulmonary hypertension and ILD are the manifestations with the greatest negative impact in prognosis. HRCT of the chest is essential in the evaluation of patients with RA with respiratory symptoms, especially those with higher risk factors for ILD, such as male gender, smoking, older age, high levels of rheumatoid factor, or positive anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibody results. Additionally, other etiologies that may determine tomographic pleuropulmonary manifestations in patients with RA are infections, neoplasms, and drug-induced lung disease. In these scenarios, clinical presentation is heterogeneous, varying from being asymptomatic to having progressive respiratory failure. Knowledge on the potential etiologies causing tomographic pleuropulmonary manifestations in patients with RA coupled with proper clinical reasoning is crucial to diagnose and treat these patients.


RESUMO A artrite reumatoide (AR) é uma doença inflamatória autoimune e heterogênea que afeta vários sistemas, principalmente as articulações. Dentre as manifestações extra-articulares da AR, o acometimento pleuropulmonar ocorre com frequência, com diferentes apresentações, potencialmente em todos os compartimentos anatômicos do tórax e pode determinar alta morbidade e mortalidade. As manifestações pleuropulmonares mais comuns em pacientes com AR incluem doença pulmonar intersticial (DPI), doença pleural, hipertensão arterial pulmonar, nódulos pulmonares reumatoides, doença das vias aéreas (bronquiectasia e bronquiolite) e linfadenopatia. A hipertensão pulmonar e a DPI são as manifestações com maior impacto negativo no prognóstico. A TCAR de tórax é essencial na avaliação de pacientes com AR sintomáticos respiratórios, principalmente aqueles com fatores de risco maiores para DPI, como sexo masculino, tabagismo, idade mais avançada, níveis elevados de fator reumatoide ou anticorpos antipeptídeos citrulinados cíclicos positivos. Além disso, outras etiologias que podem determinar manifestações pleuropulmonares tomográficas em pacientes com AR são infecções, neoplasias e doença pulmonar induzida por drogas. Nesses cenários, a apresentação clínica é heterogênea, variando de ausência de sintomas a insuficiência respiratória progressiva. O conhecimento das possíveis etiologias causadoras de manifestações pleuropulmonares tomográficas em pacientes com AR, aliado a um raciocínio clínico adequado, é fundamental para o diagnóstico e tratamento desses pacientes.

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