| Literature DB >> 28905528 |
Won Young Kim1, Sang Bum Hong2.
Abstract
In 2011, a cluster of peripartum patients were admitted to the intensive care unit of a tertiary hospital in Seoul with signs and symptoms of severe respiratory distress of unknown etiology. Subsequent epidemiological and animal studies suggested that humidifier disinfectant (HD) might represent the source of this pathology. Epidemiological studies, animal studies, and dose-response analysis demonstrated a strong association between HD use and lung injuries. The diagnostic criteria for HD-associated lung injury (HDALI) was defined on the basis of the clinical, pathological, and radiological attributes of the patients. The clinical spectrum of HDALI appears to range from asymptomatic to full-blown acute respiratory failure, and some patients have required actual lung transplantation for survival. The overall mortality of the exposed population was not significant, although peripartum patients and children who were admitted to the intensive care unit did show high mortality rates. Persistent clinical findings such as diffuse ill-defined centrilobular nodules and restrictive lung dysfunction were observed in some of the survivors. The findings of this review emphasize the importance of assessment of the level of toxicity of chemical inhalants utilized in a home setting, as well as the need to identify and monitor afflicted individuals after inhalational injury. Copyright©2017. The Korean Academy of Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Disinfectants; Humidifiers; Lung Injury; Prognosis; Review
Year: 2017 PMID: 28905528 PMCID: PMC5617851 DOI: 10.4046/trd.2017.0048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tuberc Respir Dis (Seoul) ISSN: 1738-3536
Figure 1The three stages of humidifier disinfectant-associated lung injury in a 33-year-old woman. (A) Initial computed tomography (CT) scan shows diffuse centrilobular ground-glass opacity nodules with patchy multifocal consolidations. (B) CT examination performed on the day of admission to our hospital shows resolution of the consolidations, but diffuse ground-glass opacity nodules have become more distinct. (C) Follow-up CT scan obtained 2 weeks after admission shows persistence of diffuse ground-glass opacity nodules and pneumomediastinum.
Figure 2Pathology of the explanted lungs. (A) The main pathology was that of a fibroinflammatory process, which predominantly involved the bronchioles and centrilobular lung parenchyma in the absence of notable granuloma formation. Subpleural and paraseptal airspaces were relatively preserved (H&E stain, ×40). (B) Parenchymal lesions showed histological patterns, which ranged from the early exudative phase to the extensive fibrosing phase (H&E stain, ×40).
Diagnostic criteria for HD-associated lung injury
| Definite | Probable | Possible | Unlikely | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical finding | Strong clinical history of symptoms, physical signs, and radiological features consistent with HD exposure* without evidence of infectious, autoimmune, or other typical interstitial lung disease | Strong clinical history of symptoms, physical signs, and radiological features consistent with HD exposure*, even with some evidence of infectious, autoimmune, or other typical interstitial lung disease | Strong evidence of infectious, autoimmune, or other typical interstitial lung disease, with weak or incomplete clinical features of symptoms, physical signs, and radiological evidence of HD exposure* | Strong evidence of infectious, autoimmune, or other typical interstitial lung disease, with inconsistent or no clinical features of symptoms, physical signs, and radiological evidence of HD exposure* |
| Radiological (CT) finding | Initial multifocal, patchy consolidation sparing subpleural areas, followed by disappearance of consolidation along with progression to diffuse, centrilobular, ground-glass opacity | Persistent, diffuse, and extensive centrilobular ground-glass no dular opacities with no evidence of air trapping visualized on follow-up CT | Subtle features of diffuse and extensive centrilobular ground-glass opacities or other similar features | No evidence of diffuse and extensive centrilobular ground-glass opacity |
| Pathological finding | Nonsuppurative necrotizing and obliterative bronchiolitis with various stages of peribronchiolar organizing alveolar damage | Patchy distribution of alveolar damage with predominant centrilobular distribution | Diffuse alveolar damage, fibrinous and organizing pneumonia | Suppurative inflammation with bronchopneumonia or a lobar pneumonia pattern |
*Clinical evidence of disinfectant included: (1) acute or subacute development of cough, dyspnea, or breathlessness; (2) physical signs of spontaneous air leakage, including subcutaneous or mediastinal emphysema; and (3) chest radiographic features of terminal bronchiolar damage.
HD: humidifier disinfectant; CT: computed tomography.
Figure 3Mean changes in lung function over time after humidifier disinfectant-associated lung injury. FVC: forced vital capacity; FEV1: forced expiratory volume in 1 second. ***p<0.001, *p<0.05 compared with the previous year, as assessed with repeated measures analysis of variance.
Figure 4Frequency over time of patients whose lung function was normal of abnormal (A) or whose lung function improved (B) compared with previous years. Five patients who had normal lung function at onset were excluded from this analysis. It was considered to have improved but not normalized if the forced vital capacity % predicted (FVC%pred) increased but did not achieve ≥80%. The total number of patients in each group is shown above the bar.