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Chronic lung diseases: specific diagnosis by using CT.

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TLDR
Interpretation of the appearance of the lung on CT scans was accurate in diagnosing usual interstitial pneumonia, sarcoidosis, and lymphangitic carcinomatosis.
Abstract
We evaluated patterns of abnormal lung parenchyma on CT scans in six specific chronic lung diseases and then applied those findings in the differential diagnosis of these lung parenchymal patterns in 56 subjects. There were 48 patients with chronic lung diseases (43 with histologic proof) consisting of usual interstitial pneumonia (n = 20), sarcoidosis (n = 16), lymphangitic carcinomatosis (n = 7), lymphangioleiomyomatosis (n = 2), drug toxicity (n = 2), and eosinophilic granuloma (n = 1). Including eight CT scans of normal control subjects, 56 CT scans were assessed independently by two readers (R1 and R2). Chest radiographs, most of which were obtained within 1 week of CT examination, were available in 48 of the 56 subjects. CT scans were evaluated for specific parenchymal features including disease distribution, lung distortion, thickening of bronchovascular bundles and polygon walls, bronchiectasis, cysts, and nodules, to determine the association of each abnormal feature with the different diseases. Diagnosis was then made from the overall CT appearance of the lungs and, on a separate occasion, from the appearance of the chest radiograph. The correct diagnosis was made from the CT appearance in 54 of 56 patients (R1) and in 50 of 56 patients (R2). Correct diagnoses were made from the chest radiographs in 42 of 48 patients (R1) and 43 of 48 patients (R2). We have identified features that are reproducible and useful when describing CT scans of patients with chronic lung diseases. Interpretation of the appearance of the lung on CT scans was accurate in diagnosing usual interstitial pneumonia, sarcoidosis, and lymphangitic carcinomatosis.

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Pulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis. A study of 69 patients. Groupe d'Etudes et de Recherche sur les Maladies "Orphelines" Pulmonaires (GERM"O"P).

TL;DR: The clinical features were in keeping with previous studies, but it was found that exertional dyspnea and pneumothorax were the most common features, and chylous involvement was less frequent, and overall survival was better than usually reported in LAM.
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Can CT Distinguish Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis from Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis

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Comparative accuracy of high resolution computed tomography and chest radiography in the diagnosis of chronic diffuse infiltrative lung disease.

TL;DR: This study emphasizes the important role of CT in helping to confirm or refute the presence of abnormality when the chest radiograph is normal or questionably abnormal, and underlines the superior diagnostic accuracy of HRCT compared with conventional chest radiography in DILD.
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Imaging in Sarcoidosis

TL;DR: Thin-section high-resolution computed tomographic scans more clearly elucidate the intrathoracic lesions observed in sarcoidosis and may discriminate active inflammation from end-stage fibrosis and discriminate alveolitis from fibrosis.
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Accuracy of the typical computed tomographic appearances of fibrosing alveolitis.

TL;DR: High resolution CT is superior to chest radiography in establishing the diagnosis of fibrosing alveolitis and the typical CT appearances are virtually pathognomonic, which should further reduce the need for open lung biopsy in this condition.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Asbestos-related pleural and parenchymal fibrosis: detection with high-resolution CT.

TL;DR: An HRCT study including prone scans is a sensitive, reliable means of detecting thoracic abnormalities in asbestos-exposed individuals and could be an important adjunct in the evaluation of asbestos-related pleuroparenchymal fibrosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Usual interstitial pneumonia: correlation of CT with clinical, functional, and radiologic findings.

TL;DR: Correlation between disease extent on computed tomographic scans and severity of clinical and functional impairment was obtained in 23 patients with usual interstitial pneumonia by review of the clinical data, pulmonary function tests, chest radiographs, and CT scans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Normal and diseased isolated lungs: high-resolution CT.

TL;DR: High-resolution computed tomography scans of 12 isolated, inflated, fresh lungs obtained at autopsy were compared with thin, paper-mounted lung sections obtained at the same levels to demonstrate some features of the normal secondary pulmonary lobule and structural alterations produced by various diseases.
Book

Synopsis of Diseases of the Chest

TL;DR: The normal Lung: Radiography, Computed Tomography, Radionuclide Imaging, and Ultrasonography.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pulmonary lymphangitic carcinomatosis: CT and pathologic findings.

TL;DR: The authors retrospectively reviewed the computed tomographic scans, biopsy specimens, autopsy results, and lobectomy specimens of 21 patients who had lymphangitic carcinomatosis and found certain characteristic findings on CT scans may relate to tumor thrombi in lymphatic vessels rather than edema and fibrosis, at least in the early stages of disease.
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Interpretation of the appearance of the lung on CT scans was accurate in diagnosing usual interstitial pneumonia, sarcoidosis, and lymphangitic carcinomatosis.