| Literature DB >> 35893099 |
Brindusa Ana Cimpoca Raptis1,2, Anca Maria Panaitescu1,2, Gheorghe Peltecu1,2, Nicolae Gica1,2, Radu Botezatu1,2, Mihaela Roxana Popescu3,4, Anca Macri5, Ana Constantin5, Bogdan Pavel6,7.
Abstract
Pulmonary Alveolar Proteinosis (PAP) is a rare, usually autoimmune, disease, where surfactant accumulates within alveoli due to decreased clearance, causing dyspnea and hypoxemia. The disease is even more rare in pregnancy; nevertheless, it has been reported in pregnant women and can even appear for the first time during pregnancy as an asthma-like illness. Therefore, awareness is important. Similarly to many autoimmune diseases, it can worsen during pregnancy and postpartum, causing maternal and fetal/neonatal complications. This paper offers a narrative literature review of PAP and pregnancy, while illustrating a case of a pregnant patient with known PAP who developed preeclampsia in the third trimester but had an overall fortunate maternal and neonatal outcome.Entities:
Keywords: auto-antibodies; maternal–fetal transfer; pregnancy complications; pulmonary alveolar lipoproteinosis; pulmonary alveolar proteinosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35893099 PMCID: PMC9331898 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58080984
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.948
Figure 1Normal surfactant clearance (blue) and changes occurring in PAP (red). In PAP, there are abnormal antibodies against the granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor that impair the normal function of lung macrophages with the accumulation of undegraded surfactant. Gas exchange is altered at the level of the lung alveoli, and this can lead to hypoxemia.
Causes of PAP.
| Primary | Secondary | Genetic |
|---|---|---|
| IgG anti GM-CSF | Kaolin, indium, titanium, talc, silica, aluminum | SFTPB |
| Deficiency in GM-CSF receptors | HIV infection | SFTPC |
| Chemotherapy | NKX2-1 | |
| Organ transplantation | ABCA3 | |
| Agammaglobulinemia | SLC7A7 | |
| Dermatomyositis | CSF2RA | |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | ||
| Behcet’s disease |
SFTB—Surfactant protein B; SFTC—Surfactant protein C; NKX2-1—NK2 homeobox 1; ABCA-3—ATP binding cassette 3; SLC7A7—Solute Carrier Family 7 Member 7; CSF2RA—Colony Stimulating Factor 2 Receptor Subunit Alpha.
PAP and pregnancy literature cases.
| Author | Year | Maternal Outcome | Fetal Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Matuschak GM [ | 1984 | Twice WLL during pregnancy | Vaginal birth DCDA twins 38 weeks 2097 g and 1360 g |
| Canto MJ [ | 1995 | Moderate restrictive ventilatory defect, without exacerbation during pregnancy | Vaginal birth, Liveborn 1800 g Apgar 8/10 |
| Jannkowich M [ | 2006 | Second trimester: segmental lung lavage via flexible bronchoscopy | CS 32 weeks, healthy baby |
| Belchior I [ | 2011 | First trimester: one WLL | CS 37 weeks, healthy baby |
WLL—whole-lung lavage; DCDA—dichorionic diamniotic; CS—Cesarean section.
Respiratory changes during pregnancy.
| Respiratory Parameter | Change |
|---|---|
| Tidal Volume | +40% |
| Minute Ventilation | +50% |
| Respiratory rate | +15% |
| Functional residual capacity | −20% |
| VO2 | +20–25% |
| P50 | +3 mmHg |
| FEV1 | No change |
VO2—oxygen consumption; P50—paO2 corresponding to a saturation of 50%; FEV1—forced expiratory volume at 1 s of expiration.