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1.
J Thorac Imaging ; 2023 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37732711

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Military deployment to dusty, austere environments in Southwest Asia and Afghanistan is associated with symptomatic airways diseases including asthma and bronchiolitis. The utility of chest high-resolution computed tomographic (HRCT) imaging in lung disease diagnosis in this population is poorly understood. We investigated visual assessment of HRCT for identifying deployment-related lung disease compared with healthy controls. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Chest HRCT images from 46 healthy controls and 45 symptomatic deployed military personnel with clinically confirmed asthma and/or biopsy-confirmed distal lung disease were scored by 3 independent thoracic radiologists. We compared demographic and clinical characteristics and frequency of imaging findings between deployers and controls, and between deployers with asthma and those with biopsy-confirmed distal lung disease, using χ2, Fisher exact or t tests, and logistic regression where appropriate. We also analyzed inter-rater agreement for imaging findings. RESULTS: Expiratory air trapping was the only chest CT imaging finding that was significantly more frequent in deployers compared with controls. None of the 24 deployers with biopsy-confirmed bronchiolitis and/or granulomatous pneumonitis had HRCT findings of inspiratory mosaic attenuation or centrilobular nodularity. Only 2 of 21 with biopsy-proven emphysema had emphysema on HRCT. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with surgical lung biopsy, visual assessment of HRCT showed few abnormalities in this small cohort of previously deployed symptomatic veterans with normal or near-normal spirometry.

2.
AJR Am J Roentgenol ; 212(6): 1260-1264, 2019 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30888864

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE. Birt-Hogg-Dubé (BHD) syndrome, lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM), and lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia (LIP) frequently present as isolated cystic lung disease and can be challenging to distinguish. If imaging findings are otherwise unremarkable, the radiologist is unaided by ancillary CT findings in narrowing the diagnosis. We hypothesized that the distribution and morphologic features of lung cysts could be used to differentiate BHD syndrome, LAM, and LIP. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to characterize the CT appearances of these conditions and create a practical CT-based algorithm to differentiate among them. MATERIALS AND METHODS. The study was a retrospective review of the CT images of 16 patients with BHD syndrome, 17 patients with LAM, and 14 patients with LIP. On the basis of the data collected, a CT-based algorithm was created, and the CT images were reviewed again. RESULTS. Lower lung-predominant cysts were significantly more likely to be found in patients with BHD syndrome (100% of patients) or LIP (71-93% of patients) than in patients with LAM (6-12% of patients), who were more likely to have diffuse cysts. Compared with patients with LIP or LAM, patients with BHD syndrome were significantly more likely to have elliptical (floppy) paramediastinal cysts (88-94% of patients with BHD syndrome, 36-43% of patients with LIP, and 6-12% of patients with LAM) or a disproportionate number of paramediastinal cysts (69-88% of patients with BHD syndrome, 0-14% of patients with LIP, and 0-6% of patients with LAM). Our algorithm enabled differentiation of BHD syndrome, LAM, and LIP with a high level of accuracy and high interreader agreement (κ = 0.809). CONCLUSION. Radiologists can use the proposed CT-based algorithm to prospectively and confidently suggest one of these disorders as the favored diagnosis. Of importance, this will allow diagnosing the disorder early and accurately, screening for comorbidities, and prevention of potential complications.

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