| Literature DB >> 21787440 |
Sonye K Danoff1, Livia Casciola-Rosen.
Abstract
Interstitial lung disease is a common manifestation of autoimmune myositis that confers significant morbidity and mortality. The vulnerability of the lung may offer insight into the etiology of this autoimmune disease. The frequency and patterns of lung injury vary based on the autoantibody. Antibodies against the aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases and melanoma differentiation-induced gene-5 are frequently associated with interstitial lung disease. Although the mechanisms underlying these associations have not been fully elucidated, emerging data highlight the importance of autoantigen expression and conformation in the target tissue (lung and muscle, in this case), as well as identifying relevant amplifying pathways (such as regeneration).Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21787440 PMCID: PMC3239334 DOI: 10.1186/ar3347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Pathologic patterns in interstitial lung disease
| Pattern | Pathologic findings | Associated outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Acute interstitial pneumonia | Diffuse alveolar damage with hyaline membrane formation | >90% mortality at 30 days |
| Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia or bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing Pneumonia | Intraluminal fibromyxoid tissue in the terminal and respiratory bronchioles | Good response to steroids |
| Nonspecific interstitial pneumonia | Temporally and spatially homogeneous inflammatory injury with and without fibrosis | Good response except with fibrosing variant |
| Usual interstitial pneumonia | Temporally heterogeneous, subpleural inflammatory injury with fibrosis and honeycombing | Less responsive to immunosuppressant therapies |
Figure 1Characteristic features of antisynthetase syndrome.