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*Biopsy of the lung  
*Biopsy of the lung  
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Sarcoidosis must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [[bone pain]], [[edema]], and [[erythema]].
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! style="background: #4479BA; width: 180px;" | {{fontcolor|#ffffff|Disease}}
! style="background: #4479BA; width: 650px;" | {{fontcolor|#ffffff|Findings}}
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| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #DCDCDC;" | '''Soft tissue infection'''<br> (Commonly [[cellulitis]])
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #F5F5F5;" | History of skin warmness, swelling and erythema. Bone probing is the definite way to differentiate them.<ref name="pmid8532002">{{cite journal |vauthors=Bisno AL, Stevens DL |title=Streptococcal infections of skin and soft tissues |journal=N. Engl. J. Med. |volume=334 |issue=4 |pages=240–5 |year=1996 |pmid=8532002 |doi=10.1056/NEJM199601253340407 |url=}}</ref><ref name="pmid24947530">{{cite journal |vauthors=Stevens DL, Bisno AL, Chambers HF, Dellinger EP, Goldstein EJ, Gorbach SL, Hirschmann JV, Kaplan SL, Montoya JG, Wade JC |title=Practice guidelines for the diagnosis and management of skin and soft tissue infections: 2014 update by the infectious diseases society of America |journal=Clin. Infect. Dis. |volume=59 |issue=2 |pages=147–59 |year=2014 |pmid=24947530 |doi=10.1093/cid/ciu296 |url=}}</ref>
|-
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''[[Osteonecrosis]]'''<br>(Avascular necrosis of bone)
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #F5F5F5;" |Previous history of trauma, radiation, use of steroids or biphosphonates are suggestive to differentiate osteonecrosis from ostemyelitis.<ref name="pmid21865285">{{cite journal |vauthors=Shigemura T, Nakamura J, Kishida S, Harada Y, Ohtori S, Kamikawa K, Ochiai N, Takahashi K |title=Incidence of osteonecrosis associated with corticosteroid therapy among different underlying diseases: prospective MRI study |journal=Rheumatology (Oxford) |volume=50 |issue=11 |pages=2023–8 |year=2011 |pmid=21865285 |doi=10.1093/rheumatology/ker277 |url=}}</ref><ref name="pmid25480307">{{cite journal |vauthors=Slobogean GP, Sprague SA, Scott T, Bhandari M |title=Complications following young femoral neck fractures |journal=Injury |volume=46 |issue=3 |pages=484–91 |year=2015 |pmid=25480307 |doi=10.1016/j.injury.2014.10.010 |url=}}</ref><br> MRI is diagnostic.<ref name="pmid22022684">{{cite journal |vauthors=Amanatullah DF, Strauss EJ, Di Cesare PE |title=Current management options for osteonecrosis of the femoral head: part 1, diagnosis and nonoperative management |journal=Am J. Orthop. |volume=40 |issue=9 |pages=E186–92 |year=2011 |pmid=22022684 |doi= |url=}}</ref><ref name="pmid15116601">{{cite journal |vauthors=Etienne G, Mont MA, Ragland PS |title=The diagnosis and treatment of nontraumatic osteonecrosis of the femoral head |journal=Instr Course Lect |volume=53 |issue= |pages=67–85 |year=2004 |pmid=15116601 |doi= |url=}}</ref>
|-
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''[[Charcot arthropathy|Charcot joint]]'''
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #F5F5F5;" |Patients with [[Charcot arthropathy|Charcot joint]] commonly develop skin ulcerations that can in turn lead to secondary osteomyelitis.<br>Contrast-enhanced MRI may be diagnostically useful if it shows a sinus tract, replacement of soft tissue fat, a fluid collection, or extensive marrow abnormalities. Bone biopsy is the definitive diagnostic modality.<ref name="pmid16436821">{{cite journal |vauthors=Ahmadi ME, Morrison WB, Carrino JA, Schweitzer ME, Raikin SM, Ledermann HP |title=Neuropathic arthropathy of the foot with and without superimposed osteomyelitis: MR imaging characteristics |journal=Radiology |volume=238 |issue=2 |pages=622–31 |year=2006 |pmid=16436821 |doi=10.1148/radiol.2382041393 |url=}}</ref>
|-
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''[[Bone tumors]]'''
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #F5F5F5;" |May present with local pain and radiographic changes consistent with osteomyelitis. <br>Tumors most likely to mimic osteomyelitis are ''osteoid osteomas'' and ''chondroblastomas'' that produce small, round, radiolucent lesions on radiographs.<ref>{{cite book | last = Lovell | first = Wood | title = Lovell and Winter's pediatric orthopaedics | publisher = Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins | location = Philadelphia | year = 2014 | isbn = 978-1605478142 }}</ref>
|-
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''[[Gout]]'''
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #F5F5F5;" |Gout presents with [[joint pain]] and [[swelling]]. Joint aspiration and crystals in synovial fluid is diagnostic for gout.<ref name="pmid20662061">{{cite journal |vauthors=Joosten LA, Netea MG, Mylona E, Koenders MI, Malireddi RK, Oosting M, Stienstra R, van de Veerdonk FL, Stalenhoef AF, Giamarellos-Bourboulis EJ, Kanneganti TD, van der Meer JW |title=Engagement of fatty acids with Toll-like receptor 2 drives interleukin-1β production via the ASC/caspase 1 pathway in monosodium urate monohydrate crystal-induced gouty arthritis |journal=Arthritis Rheum. |volume=62 |issue=11 |pages=3237–48 |year=2010 |pmid=20662061 |pmc=2970687 |doi=10.1002/art.27667 |url=}}</ref>
|-
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''[[SAPHO syndrome]]'''<br>(Synovitis, acne, pustulosis, hyperostosis, and osteitis)
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #F5F5F5;" |[[SAPHO syndrome]] consists of a wide spectrum of neutrophilic [[dermatosis]] associated with aseptic osteoarticular lesions. <br>It can mimic osteomyelitis in patients who lack the characteristic findings of pustulosis and [[synovitis]]. <br>The diagnosis is established via clinical manifestations; bone culture is sterile in the setting of [[osteitis]].
|-
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''[[Sarcoidosis]]'''
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #F5F5F5;" |It involves most frequently the pulmonary [[parenchyma]] and mediastinal lymph nodes, but any organ system can be affected. <br>Bone involvement is often bilateral and bones commonly affected include the middle and distal phalanges (producing “sausage finger”), wrist, skull, vertebral column, and long bones.
|-
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''[[Langerhans' cell histiocytosis]]'''
| style="padding: 7px 7px; background: #F5F5F5;" |The disease usually manifests in the skeleton and solitary bone lesions are encountered twice as often as multiple bone lesions.<br>The tumours can develop in any bone, but most commonly originate in the skull and jaw, followed by vertebral bodies, ribs, pelvis, and long bones.<ref name="pmid26461144">{{cite journal |vauthors=Picarsic J, Jaffe R |title=Nosology and Pathology of Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis |journal=Hematol. Oncol. Clin. North Am. |volume=29 |issue=5 |pages=799–823 |year=2015 |pmid=26461144 |doi=10.1016/j.hoc.2015.06.001 |url=}}</ref>
|-
|}
|}



Revision as of 05:51, 17 September 2017

Sarcoidosis Microchapters

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

Overview

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Differential Diagnosis

Sarcoidosis has many differentials, which can be classified depending on the organ involved.[1]

Lung[2]

1.Tuberculosis 2.Atypical Mycobacteriosis 3.Cryptococcosis 4.Aspergillosis 5.Aspiration of foriegn materials 6.Blastomycosis 7.Pneumocystitis carinii 8.Pneumoconiosis 9.Drug reactions 10.Hypersensitivity pneumonitis 11.Drug reactions12..Histoplasmosis 13.Chronic interstitial pneumonia 14.Necrotizing sarcoid granulomatosis 15.Wegner's granulomatosis

Lymph Node

1.Tuberculosis 2.Atypical Mycobacteriosis 3.Brucellosis 4.GLUS syndrome 5.Cat scratch disease 6.Toxoplasmosis 7.Hodgkin disease 8.Non Hodgkin lymphoma 9.Sarcoid reaction in lymph nodes to carcinoma 10.Kikuchi disease(granulomatous histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis)

Skin

1.Tuberculosis 2.Atypical mycobacteriosis 3.Fungal infection 4.Rheumatoid nodules 6.Reaction to foreign bodies

Liver

1.Tuberculosis 2.Brucellosis 3.Schitosomiasis 4.Crohn's disease 5.Hodgkin's disease 6. Non hodgkin's lymphoma 7.GLUS syndrome 8.Primary biliary cirrhosis

Bone Marrow

1.Tuberculosis 2.Histoplasmosis 3.Cytomegalovirus 4.Drugs 5.Infectious Mononucleosis 6.GLUS syndrome 7.Hodgkin's disease 8.Non Hodgkin's lymphoma

Other biopsy sites

1.Tuberculosis 2.Brucellosis 3.Crohn's disease 4.GLUS Syndrome 5.Other infections 6.Giant cell myocarditis

Differential diagnosis

Causes of

lung cavities

Differentiating Features Differentiating radiological findings Diagnosis

confirmation

  • CXR and CT demonstrates cavities in the upper lobe of the lung
  • Sputum smear positive for acid-fast bacilli and nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT) is used on sputum or any sterile fluid for rapid diagnosis and is positive for mycobacteria.
  • Any age group
  • Acute, fulminant life threating complication of prior infection
  • >100.4F fever, with hemodynamic instability
  • Worsening pneumonia-like symptoms
  • CBC is positive for causative organism
  • Children and elderly are at risk
  • Empyema appears lenticular in shape and has a thin wall with smooth luminal margins
  • Pulmonary nodules with cavities and infiltrates are a frequent manifestation on CXR
  • Elderly females of 40-50 age group
  • Manifestation of rheumatoid arthritis
  • Presents with other systemic symptoms including symmetric arthritis of the small joints of the hands and feet with morning stiffness are common manifestations.
  • Pulmonary nodules with cavitation are located in the upper lobe (Caplan syndrome) on Xray.
  • On CXR bilateral adenopathy and coarse reticular opacities are seen.
  • CT of the chest demonstrates extensive hilar and mediastinal adenopathy
  • Additional findings on CT include fibrosis (honeycomb, linear, or associated with bronchial distortion), pleural thickening, and ground-glass opacities.[9]
  • Common appearance on CT is patchy consolidation,often accompanied by ground-glass opacities and nodules.[13]
  • Exclusively afflicts smokers, with a peak age of onset of between 20 and 40 years.
  • Clinical presentation varies, but symptoms generally include months of dry cough, fever, night sweats and weight loss.
  • Skin is involved in 80% of the cases, scaly erythematous rash is typical.
  • Thin-walled cystic cavities are the usual radiographic manifestation, observed in over 50% of patients by either CXR or CT scans.[15]
  • Biopsy of the lung

Sarcoidosis must be differentiated from other diseases that cause bone pain, edema, and erythema.

Disease Findings
Soft tissue infection
(Commonly cellulitis)
History of skin warmness, swelling and erythema. Bone probing is the definite way to differentiate them.[16][17]
Osteonecrosis
(Avascular necrosis of bone)
Previous history of trauma, radiation, use of steroids or biphosphonates are suggestive to differentiate osteonecrosis from ostemyelitis.[18][19]
MRI is diagnostic.[20][21]
Charcot joint Patients with Charcot joint commonly develop skin ulcerations that can in turn lead to secondary osteomyelitis.
Contrast-enhanced MRI may be diagnostically useful if it shows a sinus tract, replacement of soft tissue fat, a fluid collection, or extensive marrow abnormalities. Bone biopsy is the definitive diagnostic modality.[22]
Bone tumors May present with local pain and radiographic changes consistent with osteomyelitis.
Tumors most likely to mimic osteomyelitis are osteoid osteomas and chondroblastomas that produce small, round, radiolucent lesions on radiographs.[23]
Gout Gout presents with joint pain and swelling. Joint aspiration and crystals in synovial fluid is diagnostic for gout.[24]
SAPHO syndrome
(Synovitis, acne, pustulosis, hyperostosis, and osteitis)
SAPHO syndrome consists of a wide spectrum of neutrophilic dermatosis associated with aseptic osteoarticular lesions.
It can mimic osteomyelitis in patients who lack the characteristic findings of pustulosis and synovitis.
The diagnosis is established via clinical manifestations; bone culture is sterile in the setting of osteitis.
Sarcoidosis It involves most frequently the pulmonary parenchyma and mediastinal lymph nodes, but any organ system can be affected.
Bone involvement is often bilateral and bones commonly affected include the middle and distal phalanges (producing “sausage finger”), wrist, skull, vertebral column, and long bones.
Langerhans' cell histiocytosis The disease usually manifests in the skeleton and solitary bone lesions are encountered twice as often as multiple bone lesions.
The tumours can develop in any bone, but most commonly originate in the skull and jaw, followed by vertebral bodies, ribs, pelvis, and long bones.[25]

References

  1. Samter's immunologic diseases.—6th ed./[edited by] K. Frank Austen … [et al.]
  2. Khomenko AG (1991). "[Diagnosis of granulomatous lung diseases]". Probl Tuberk (3): 5–9. PMID 1871095.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Chaudhuri MR (1973). "Primary pulmonary cavitating carcinomas". Thorax. 28 (3): 354–66. PMC 470041. PMID 4353362.
  4. Mouroux J, Padovani B, Elkaïm D, Richelme H (1996). "Should cavitated bronchopulmonary cancers be considered a separate entity?". Ann. Thorac. Surg. 61 (2): 530–2. doi:10.1016/0003-4975(95)00973-6. PMID 8572761.
  5. Onn A, Choe DH, Herbst RS, Correa AM, Munden RF, Truong MT, Vaporciyan AA, Isobe T, Gilcrease MZ, Marom EM (2005). "Tumor cavitation in stage I non-small cell lung cancer: epidermal growth factor receptor expression and prediction of poor outcome". Radiology. 237 (1): 342–7. doi:10.1148/radiol.2371041650. PMID 16183941.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Langford CA, Hoffman GS (1999). "Rare diseases.3: Wegener's granulomatosis". Thorax. 54 (7): 629–37. PMC 1745525. PMID 10377211.
  7. Lee KS, Kim TS, Fujimoto K, Moriya H, Watanabe H, Tateishi U, Ashizawa K, Johkoh T, Kim EA, Kwon OJ (2003). "Thoracic manifestation of Wegener's granulomatosis: CT findings in 30 patients". Eur Radiol. 13 (1): 43–51. doi:10.1007/s00330-002-1422-2. PMID 12541109.
  8. Baughman RP, Teirstein AS, Judson MA, Rossman MD, Yeager H, Bresnitz EA, DePalo L, Hunninghake G, Iannuzzi MC, Johns CJ, McLennan G, Moller DR, Newman LS, Rabin DL, Rose C, Rybicki B, Weinberger SE, Terrin ML, Knatterud GL, Cherniak R (2001). "Clinical characteristics of patients in a case control study of sarcoidosis". Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 164 (10 Pt 1): 1885–9. doi:10.1164/ajrccm.164.10.2104046. PMID 11734441.
  9. Brauner MW, Grenier P, Mompoint D, Lenoir S, de Crémoux H (1989). "Pulmonary sarcoidosis: evaluation with high-resolution CT". Radiology. 172 (2): 467–71. doi:10.1148/radiology.172.2.2748828. PMID 2748828.
  10. Murphy J, Schnyder P, Herold C, Flower C (1998). "Bronchiolitis obliterans organising pneumonia simulating bronchial carcinoma". Eur Radiol. 8 (7): 1165–9. doi:10.1007/s003300050527. PMID 9724431.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Al-Ghanem S, Al-Jahdali H, Bamefleh H, Khan AN (2008). "Bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia: pathogenesis, clinical features, imaging and therapy review". Ann Thorac Med. 3 (2): 67–75. doi:10.4103/1817-1737.39641. PMC 2700454. PMID 19561910.
  12. Cordier JF, Loire R, Brune J (1989). "Idiopathic bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia. Definition of characteristic clinical profiles in a series of 16 patients". Chest. 96 (5): 999–1004. PMID 2805873.
  13. Lee KS, Kullnig P, Hartman TE, Müller NL (1994). "Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia: CT findings in 43 patients". AJR Am J Roentgenol. 162 (3): 543–6. doi:10.2214/ajr.162.3.8109493. PMID 8109493.
  14. Suri HS, Yi ES, Nowakowski GS, Vassallo R (2012). "Pulmonary langerhans cell histiocytosis". Orphanet J Rare Dis. 7: 16. doi:10.1186/1750-1172-7-16. PMC 3342091. PMID 22429393.
  15. Moore AD, Godwin JD, Müller NL, Naidich DP, Hammar SP, Buschman DL, Takasugi JE, de Carvalho CR (1989). "Pulmonary histiocytosis X: comparison of radiographic and CT findings". Radiology. 172 (1): 249–54. doi:10.1148/radiology.172.1.2787035. PMID 2787035.
  16. Bisno AL, Stevens DL (1996). "Streptococcal infections of skin and soft tissues". N. Engl. J. Med. 334 (4): 240–5. doi:10.1056/NEJM199601253340407. PMID 8532002.
  17. Stevens DL, Bisno AL, Chambers HF, Dellinger EP, Goldstein EJ, Gorbach SL, Hirschmann JV, Kaplan SL, Montoya JG, Wade JC (2014). "Practice guidelines for the diagnosis and management of skin and soft tissue infections: 2014 update by the infectious diseases society of America". Clin. Infect. Dis. 59 (2): 147–59. doi:10.1093/cid/ciu296. PMID 24947530.
  18. Shigemura T, Nakamura J, Kishida S, Harada Y, Ohtori S, Kamikawa K, Ochiai N, Takahashi K (2011). "Incidence of osteonecrosis associated with corticosteroid therapy among different underlying diseases: prospective MRI study". Rheumatology (Oxford). 50 (11): 2023–8. doi:10.1093/rheumatology/ker277. PMID 21865285.
  19. Slobogean GP, Sprague SA, Scott T, Bhandari M (2015). "Complications following young femoral neck fractures". Injury. 46 (3): 484–91. doi:10.1016/j.injury.2014.10.010. PMID 25480307.
  20. Amanatullah DF, Strauss EJ, Di Cesare PE (2011). "Current management options for osteonecrosis of the femoral head: part 1, diagnosis and nonoperative management". Am J. Orthop. 40 (9): E186–92. PMID 22022684.
  21. Etienne G, Mont MA, Ragland PS (2004). "The diagnosis and treatment of nontraumatic osteonecrosis of the femoral head". Instr Course Lect. 53: 67–85. PMID 15116601.
  22. Ahmadi ME, Morrison WB, Carrino JA, Schweitzer ME, Raikin SM, Ledermann HP (2006). "Neuropathic arthropathy of the foot with and without superimposed osteomyelitis: MR imaging characteristics". Radiology. 238 (2): 622–31. doi:10.1148/radiol.2382041393. PMID 16436821.
  23. Lovell, Wood (2014). Lovell and Winter's pediatric orthopaedics. Philadelphia: Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 978-1605478142.
  24. Joosten LA, Netea MG, Mylona E, Koenders MI, Malireddi RK, Oosting M, Stienstra R, van de Veerdonk FL, Stalenhoef AF, Giamarellos-Bourboulis EJ, Kanneganti TD, van der Meer JW (2010). "Engagement of fatty acids with Toll-like receptor 2 drives interleukin-1β production via the ASC/caspase 1 pathway in monosodium urate monohydrate crystal-induced gouty arthritis". Arthritis Rheum. 62 (11): 3237–48. doi:10.1002/art.27667. PMC 2970687. PMID 20662061.
  25. Picarsic J, Jaffe R (2015). "Nosology and Pathology of Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis". Hematol. Oncol. Clin. North Am. 29 (5): 799–823. doi:10.1016/j.hoc.2015.06.001. PMID 26461144.

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