| Literature DB >> 8810621 |
D Deheinzelin1, V L Capelozzi, R A Kairalla, J V Barbas Filho, P H Saldiva, C R de Carvalho.
Abstract
Interstitial disease is a recognized form of lung involvement in primary Sjögren's syndrome in which frequency and severity have not yet been established. We studied 20 patients 61.2 +/- 36.4 mo after the first symptoms of the syndrome that fulfilled criteria for both xerostomia and xerophtalmia. Eighteen patients exhibited pulmonary symptoms; nine presented a restrictive functional pattern. The chest roentgenogram disclosed interstitial involvement in nine patients. Gallium-67 lung scan presented hypercaptation in 15 of 19 patients studied. Thirteen patients who submitted to bronchoalveolar lavage presented higher cell counts with increases of lymphocytes and/or polymorphonuclear cells. All patients had abnormal results in at least one of the above. Lung biopsy, undertaken in 12 patients, showed a whole spectrum of interstitial disease, from a follicular bronchiolitis to a lymphoid interstitial pneumonia and finally fibrosis with honeycombing. One patient presented with associated sarcoid granulomas. We treated 11 patients with an azathioprine-based regimen and found a significant improvement in the forced vital capacity (p < 0.05) after at least 6 mo when compared with nontreated patients. We conclude that the frequency of interstitial lung disease is high in Sjögren's syndrome and that an azathioprine-based treatment can favorably change the outcome in this population.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8810621 DOI: 10.1164/ajrccm.154.3.8810621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med ISSN: 1073-449X Impact factor: 21.405