Pneumoconiosis differential diagnosis

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Dushka Riaz, MD

Overview

Pneumoconiosis must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [clinical feature 1], [clinical feature 2], and [clinical feature 3], such as [differential dx1], [differential dx2], and [differential dx3].

Differentiating [Disease name] from other Diseases

[Disease name] must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [clinical feature 1], [clinical feature 2], and [clinical feature 3], such as [differential dx1], [differential dx2], and [differential dx3].

OR

[Disease name] must be differentiated from [differential dx1], [differential dx2], and [differential dx3].

OR

As [disease name] manifests in a variety of clinical forms, differentiation must be established in accordance with the particular subtype. [Subtype name 1] must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [clinical feature 1], such as [differential dx1] and [differential dx2]. In contrast, [subtype name 2] must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [clinical feature 2], such as [differential dx3] and [differential dx4].

Differentiating pneumoconiosis from other diseases on the basis of dyspnea and cough

On the basis of cough and chronic dyspnea, pneumoconiosis must be differentiated from lung malignancy, tuberculosis, emphysema, asthma, interstitial lung disease, pneumonia, and sarcoidosis.

Diseases Clinical manifestations Para-clinical findings Gold standard
Symptoms Physical examination
Lab Findings Imaging
Chronic Dyspnea Cough Fever Spirometry Auscultation Tachypnea CBC ABG Imaging
Pneumoconiosis + + ↑ FEV1/FVC HRCT
Lung Malignancy + + Bronchoscopy
Tuberculosis + + IFN-y assay and acid fast stain
Emphysema + + Physical exam, spirometry
Asthma + + Physical exam, spirometry before and after brondchodilator
Interstitial lung diseases + + HRCT
Sarcoidosis + + HRCT
Pneumonia + + CXR, CT Scan

References

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