| Literature DB >> 28840061 |
Mariaelena Occhipinti1,2, Anna Rita Larici2, Lorenzo Bonomo2, Raffaele Antonelli Incalzi3.
Abstract
The lack of data on lung function decline in the aging process as well as the lack of gold standards to define obstructive and restrictive respiratory disease in older people point out the need for a multidimensional assessment and interpretation of the aging airways. By integrating clinical data together with morphologic and morphometric findings clinicians can assess the airways with a more comprehensive perspective, helpful in the interpretation of the "grey zone" between normal aging and disease. This review focuses on the value of a multidimensional approach in the study of the aging airways, including clinical findings, respiratory function tests, and imaging as parts of a whole. Nowadays this multidimensional diagnostic approach can be used in daily clinical practice. In next future, it can be implemented by the analysis of exhaled gases, post-processing imaging techniques, and genetic analysis, that will hopefully reduce the gaps in knowledge of normal aging and airway disease in older people.Entities:
Keywords: aging airways; multidimensional approach; parametric response maps; post-processing imaging techniques; spirometry
Year: 2017 PMID: 28840061 PMCID: PMC5524809 DOI: 10.14336/AD.2016.1215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Dis ISSN: 2152-5250 Impact factor: 6.745
Figure 1.Multidimensional approach
Likewise, the match of primary colours generates the entire colour wheel, the match of physiological parameters, imaging, and pulmonary function tests (PFTs) allows studying the multiple facets of the airways in older people. They could be studied even deeply in next future by adding to this multidimensional approach the data provided by analysis of exhaled gases, post-processing imaging techniques, and genetic analysis.
Imaging specifics for chest CT evaluation of airway disease in older people.
| MDCT | CT scans to better assess the airways (from the trachea to the most distal visible bronchi) are multidetector CT scans (MDCT), widely spread in Western countries. MDCT scans allow generating 2D multiplanar and 3D reconstructions of the airways. |
| Patient positioning | Can be challenging in those with musculoskeletal problems. Rotation of the gantry can be helpful in obtaining axial scans even in severe dorsal kyphosis. |
| Patient Dose | Moderate radiation doses are acceptable at inspiratory CT scan (<10 mSv). Expiratory CT may be performed with lower radiation exposure (tube current ≤ 50 mAs) [ |
| Motion artifacts | MDCT takes only a few seconds to scan the entire chest, reducing or avoiding motion artifacts even in breathless patients. |
| Intravenous contrast media | Routinely not recommended. Required in known or suspected airway neoplasms, paratracheal masses causing airway obstruction, and in suspected pulmonary embolism. In case of contrast administration, glomerular filtration rate should always be performed, as normal values of creatinine in the blood for the adult population are not consistent with a good renal function in older population. |
| Breathing instructions | Fundamental to avoid motion artifacts and misleading diagnoses of airway disease. Issues in accurately following breathing instructions are more common than in younger adults, because of ear loss, dyspnea, cough, weakness of chest wall muscles, or cognitive impairment. A better compliance in following breathing instructions can be obtained by showing the procedure to the patient as well as by careful coaching the patient before and during the examination. Coaching consists of making the old patient comfortable with the instructions, ensuring him that the instructions will be repeated during the examination and he does not have to remember everything, and giving him the chance to try the protocol more times as needed [ |
(MDCT= Multidetector Computed Tomography; 2D= two dimensional; 3D= three dimensional; mSv= millisievert; mAs= milliamper/second)
Figure 2.Aging airways
Comparison between “normal” CXR in an elderly subject (A) and in a young adult (B). Postero-anterior CXR in an 87 years-old woman (A) shows displacement of the trachea (arrow) to the right side, calcifications of the tracheobronchial cartilage, symmetrical bilateral reduction in lung vascularity (more prominent in middle-upper regions), linear and reticular opacities in lung bases (asterisks), and bronchial wall thickening. All these findings cannot be seen in the younger adult (B, 45 years-old woman).
Clinically relevant airway disease in older people: clinical relevance and role of imaging.
| Airway disease | Clinical relevance in older people | Imaging |
|---|---|---|
| COPD | High prevalence in older people. | Imaging may provide a structured morphometric analysis of both large and small airways, with the evaluation of parenchymal destruction, bronchial wall thickening as well as air-trapping. This approach allows distinguishing different phenotypes, such as predominant emphysema and predominant conductive airway disease. This distinction is the key for targeting patient therapy and selecting candidates for surgical or endoscopical therapy. |
| CPFE | Most often observed in 65 years-old men, cigarette smokers or ex-smokers of >40 pack-years [ | CT shows centrilobular and/or paraseptal emphysema in upper zones and diffuse interstitial lung disease at the bases (subpleural reticular opacities, honeycomb, traction bronchiectasis, and more frequent ground-glass opacities than in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis). |
| Bronchiolitis | Aspiration and infectious bronchiolitis are the most common forms in older people. Aspiration bronchiolitis is caused by recurrent aspiration of gastric contents or foreign bodies, common in older people. Infectious bronchiolitis is caused by immunodeficiency and ineffectiveness of mucociliary clearance, part of the physiological aging. | CXR shows diffuse, unilateral or bilateral, small (<5 mm) nodular lung opacities. |
| Bronchiectases | Their diagnosis often clarifies otherwise unexplained respiratory symptoms. Older people are more prone to develop bronchiectases due to their immunodeficiency and weaken mucociliary clearance. Bronchiectases can cause recurrent tracheobronchial infections, hemoptysis, cough, systemic inflammation, respiratory failure. | CXR is often negative. |
| ECAC | Commonly underdiagnosed for its diagnostic challenge. ECAC includes tracheobronchomalacia and excessive dynamic airway collapse and it causes a worse respiratory quality of life. ECAC is more common in older subjects (mean age: 65±8.6) and in COPD patients [ | In collaborating COPD patients with high clinical suspicion for excessive expiratory tracheal collapse a dynamic forced expiratory scan should be preferred to static end-expiratory scan [ |
| Bronchial anthracofibrosis | Typical presentation in older women suffering from chronic cough, sputum, and dyspnea, and without a relevant history of pneumoconiosis or smoking [ | CT scan shows multifocal stenoses of lobar and segmental bronchi in right upper lobe and right middle lobe, with peribronchial soft tissue thickening, calcified or non-calcified lymph nodes, and lobar or segmental atelectasis distal to the involved bronchi. |
| Broncholithiasis | Higher prevalence than younger adults because of high incidence of foreign body aspiration and calcified lymph nodes. | CT scan shows calcified body (broncholith) within the lumen of the tracheobronchial tree along with post-obstructive findings, including bronchiectasis, consolidation and air-trapping. |
| Neoplasms | As age increases airway neoplasms more likely occur. However, benign airway neoplasms present with a higher incidence in older people. In two recent large series of primary | CT scan shows intraluminal masses or airway wall thickening, with or without involvement of adjacent structures. CT is fundamental for staging and follow-up. |
(COPD= chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CPFE= combined pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema; CT= Computed Tomography; ECAC= expiratory central airway collapse)
Figure 4.Post-processing imaging techniques: 2D and 3D reconstruction images
Axial CT scan (A) shows an endobronchial mass (black arrow) within right main bronchus in a 78 years-old man with squamous cell carcinoma, causing partial collapse of right lung with displacement of mediastinum towards right (white arrows). 3D virtual bronchoscopy (B, C) reproduces the bronchoscopic appearance of the mass occluding right main bronchus (arrow in b), but it allows more than bronchoscopy the visualization of the patent bronchi distal to obstruction site (C). Curved 2D MPR (multiplanar reconstructions) image (D) better depicts the cranio-caudal extent of the mass (arrow) into right main bronchus than the axial image (A). CT bronchography (E) allows a global visualization of the aerated lung and shows the site of interruption (arrow) of the tracheobronchial tree.
Figure 5.Post-processing imaging techniques: quantification of emphysema and air-trapping
Quantification in a 73 years-old woman with COPD by using dedicated software of semi-automatic lung volume segmentation (Franhofer MeVis, Germany, DE). Volume rendering CT images at end-inspiration (A) and end-expiration (B) show pulmonary lobes with different colours and low attenuation areas as orange dots. At end-inspiration (A) the dots represent areas with attenuation values below -950 HU consistent with emphysema, whereas at end-expiration (B) the dots represent areas with attenuation values below -856 HU, consistent with air-trapping and emphysema.
Figure 6.Post-processing imaging techniques: virtual lobectomy
Axial CT image at lung window setting (A) shows a mass (arrow) in the apical segment of right upper lobe in a 73 years-old man, proved to be an invasive adenocarcinoma. Lung volume segmentation performed by using semi-automated software (Thoracic VCAR, GE Healthcare, Milwaukee, WI) allows to separate each lobe along the fissures (B, C) and to obtain the volume of emphysema (blue dots) within each lobe.
Figure 7.Post-processing imaging techniques: PRM in co-registration analysis
Co-registration of inspiratory and expiratory CT scans (Imbio LLC, Minnesota, MN) provides a quantitative overview of the lungs (parametric response maps - PRM), with the relative volume of normal parenchyma (green), persistent airway disease (red), and functional airway disease (yellow). This innovative approach allows phenotypization of COPD without the need of an operator, as it is completely automated. Case “A” is a patient with predominant conductive airway disease (47% functional low-density area and 14% persistent low density area), whereas case “B” is a case with predominant emphysema (25% functional low density area and 55% persistent low density area).