Plastic bronchitis
Plastic bronchitis | |
---|---|
Other names | Fibrinous bronchitis, bronchitis pseudomembranosa, Hoffmann bronchitis |
Specialty | Respirology |
Plastic bronchitis (PB) is a disorder in which branching casts of the airways are expectorated. PB is not a single disease with a defined mechanism that explains the cast formation in all conditions. Examples of diseases associated with expectoration of casts, and which sometimes are labeled PB include tuberculosis, atypical mycobacterial disease, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, and asthma.
When casts are very large with many branches, an abnormal communication or leakage of lymphatic fluid into the airway is often the cause. This entity is termed lymphatic plastic bronchitis (LPB). LPB is a lymphatic flow disorder characterized by the recurrent formation of branching, rubbery bronchial casts composed primarily of proteinaceous and sometimes chylous material and lymphocytes. Lymphatic fluids deposited into the airspaces become gelatinous as they cool, forming large string cheese-like casts of the airways, which can obstruct airflow. Attempts to expectorate casts can be quite frightening, leading to fears of asphyxiation.
Signs and symptoms
[edit]The clinical presentation of plastic bronchitis beyond expectoration of casts includes a productive cough, dyspnea, fever and wheezing. Focal wheezing is a characteristic, if not specific, physical examination finding. If the casts completely obstruct the airway, breath sounds will be decreased and dullness will be present with percussion. With partial obstruction, a “fan sound” or “flag flapping” sound can be heard during auscultation. Bronchial casts can sometimes fill the airways of almost an entire lung, and present as an acute, life-threatening emergency.[citation needed]
Pathology
[edit]The majority of PB cases are associated with an underlying disease. Several systemic illnesses have been associated with plastic bronchitis:[1]
- Cardiac: constrictive pericarditis, congenital heart disease
- Pulmonary: asthma, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, aspergillosis, bronchiectasis, cystic fibrosis, tuberculosis, pneumonia, and bronchocentric granulomatosis
- Disorders of lymphatic drainage: lymphangiectasia, lymphangiomatosis
- Miscellaneous: acute chest syndrome/sickle cell disease, amyloidosis, rheumatoid arthritis, pseudomembranous colitis, inhaled irritants, neoplastic (lymphoma)
The most common form of plastic bronchitis follows cardiac surgery for congenital heart disease, especially the Fontan procedure. Systemic blood flow is diverted to pulmonary flow, elevating pressures in the pulmonary venous system, and promoting leaks of proteinaceous and lipid-rich fluids from the lymphatics into the bronchial tree.[2]
Diagnosis
[edit]The diagnosis of plastic bronchitis is confirmed by recovery of casts that have been coughed up or visualized during a bronchoscopy. There is no specific cytologic, pathologic or laboratory test that is diagnostic for casts due to lymphatic PB.[citation needed]
Imaging
[edit]Simple chest X-rays may reveal collapse due to airway obstruction. The contralateral lung may be hyperinflated. Casts can be visualized within the major airways using computerized axial tomography scans.[3]
Heavy T2-weighted MRI, and, as appropriate, intranodal lymphangiogram and/or dynamic contrast-enhanced MR lymphangiography may be useful for identifying pathological lymphatic tissue or lymphatic flow.[citation needed]
Management
[edit]Acute therapy for PB is often focused on removal or facilitated expectoration of the casts. This is followed by short and long term efforts to identify and remediate the underlying condition resulting in the excessive airway leakage or inflammation that is causing the casts to form.[citation needed]
PB can present as a life threatening emergency when the casts obstruct the major airways resulting in acute respiratory distress.[4][5][6] Intervention by a skilled physician experienced with foreign body removal from the lungs is essential. Evaluation by means of bronchoscopy can be difficult and time consuming and is best performed under general anesthesia.
Casts can be removed mechanically by bronchoscopy or physical therapy. High-frequency chest wall oscillation can also be used to vibrate the chest wall at a high frequency to try to loosen and thin the casts.[7][8] Inhaled therapy using bronchodilators, corticosteroids or mucolytics can be used to try to disrupt the cast formation. Guaifenesin syrup or tablets can assist in loosening existing casts for expectoration.
Recently[when?], heavy T2-weighted MRI has revealed that occult lymphatic anomalies that represent developmental remnants or subclinical GLA are present in adults who present with expectoration of large multiantennary, branching casts.[9] Intranodal lymphangiogram[10] and dynamic contrast-enhanced MR lymphangiography[11][12] have been used to more precisely image the leaks, and in the small number of patients who have been treated to date, embolization of the thoracic duct has been highly successful in controlling cast formation.[13]
Cannulation of the thoracic duct followed by embolization should be considered in those patients who are shown to have leakage of lymphatic fluid into the airway.[11]
Medications
[edit]Therapeutic interventions with medium-chain triglyceride-enriched low-fat diets, intratracheal heparin, inhaled tissue plasminogen activator, and steroids have also been reported and have met with variable success.[14][15][16][17]
Expectorants such as guaifenesin increase thinner secretions and lubricate the airways, allowing loosening and possible self-expulsion of casts.
Inhaled mucolytics: Potassium iodide and acetylcysteine inhaled therapy are often used to help the patient cough up the casts by breaking down the thick mucus formations.
Inhaled and oral steroids: If PB is associated with asthma or an infection, inhaled and oral steroids have been shown to be effective.[18][19]
Prognosis
[edit]Patients with plastic bronchitis that is being caused due to a co-morbid condition generally have a good prognosis once the underlying disease is treated.
Epidemiology
[edit]To date, about 420 cases have been reported in the medical literature.[1] Given its unusual nature, the true prevalence of PB is unknown, and it is likely that many patients are undiagnosed. PB does affect patients of all age groups and genders.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Eberlein, MH; Drummond, MB; Haponik, EF (2008). "Plastic bronchitis: a management challenge". Am J Med Sci. 335 (2): 163–169. doi:10.1097/maj.0b013e318068b60e. PMID 18277130.
- ^ Dori, Y; Keller, MS; Rome, JJ; Gillespie, MJ; Glatz, AC; Dodds, K; Goldberg, DJ; Goldfarb, S; Rychik, J; Itkin, M (2016). "Percutaneous lymphatic embolization of abnormal pulmonary lymphatic flow as treatment of plastic bronchitis in patients with congenital heart disease". Circulation. 133 (12): 1160–70. doi:10.1161/circulationaha.115.019710. PMID 26864093. S2CID 26817256.
- ^ "Plastic Bronchitis - Treatment, Symptoms and Causes".
- ^ Itabashi, S; Kano, M; Endo, K; Sasaki, H (1999). "A resuscitated case from asphyxia by large bronchial cast". Tohoku J Exp Med. 187 (2): 183–8. doi:10.1620/tjem.187.183. PMID 10228989.
- ^ Park, JY; Elshami, AA; Kang, DS; Jung, TH (1996). "Plastic bronchitis". Eur Respir J. 9 (3): 612–4. doi:10.1183/09031936.96.09030612. PMID 8730027.
- ^ Noizet, O; Leclerc, F; Leteurtre, S; Brichet, A; Pouessel, G; Dorkenoo, A; Fourier, C; Cremer, R (2003). "Plastic bronchitis mimicking foreign body aspiration that needs a specific diagnostic procedure". Intensive Care Med. 29 (2): 329–31. doi:10.1007/s00134-002-1610-1. PMID 12594596. S2CID 32534712.
- ^ Gross, D; Zidulka, A; O'Brien, C; Wright, D; Fraser, R; Rosenthal, L; King, M (1985). "Peripheral mucociliary clearance with high-frequency chest wall compression". J Appl Physiol. 58 (4): 1157–63. doi:10.1152/jappl.1985.58.4.1157. PMID 3988672.
- ^ Koga, T; Kawazu, T; Iwashita, K; Yahata, R (2004). "Pulmonary hyperinflation and respiratory distress following solvent aspiration in a patient with asthma: expectoration of bronchial casts and clinical improvement with high-frequency chest wall oscillation". Respir Care. 49 (11): 1335–8. PMID 15507168.
- ^ El Mouhadi, S; Taillé, C; Cazes, A; Arrivé, L (2015). "Plastic bronchitis related to idiopathic thoracic lymphangiectasia. Noncontrast magnetic resonance lymphography". Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 192 (5): 632–3. doi:10.1164/rccm.201503-0631im. PMID 26561678.
- ^ Nadolski, GJ; Itkin, M (2012). "Feasibility of ultrasound-guided intranodal lymphangiogram for thoracic duct embolization". J Vasc Interv Radiol. 23 (5): 613–6. doi:10.1016/j.jvir.2012.01.078. PMID 22440590.
- ^ a b Dori, Y; Keller, MS; Rychik, J; Itkin, M (2014). "Successful treatment of plastic bronchitis by selective lymphatic embolization in a Fontan patient". Pediatrics. 134 (2): e590-5. doi:10.1542/peds.2013-3723. PMID 25002668. S2CID 2257097.
- ^ Dori, Y; Zviman, MM; Itkin, M (2014). "Dynamic contrast-enhanced MR lymphangiography: feasibility study in swine". Radiology. 273 (2): 410–6. doi:10.1148/radiol.14132616. PMID 24988434.
- ^ Itkin, M; McCormack, FX; Dori, Y (2016). "Diagnosis and treatment of lymphatic plastic bronchitis in adults using advanced lymphatic imaging and percutaneous embolization". Ann Am Thorac Soc. 13 (10): 1689–96. doi:10.1513/AnnalsATS.201604-292OC. PMID 27599255.
- ^ Avitabile, CM; Goldberg, DJ; Dodds, K; Dori, Y; Ravishankar, C; Rychik, J (2014). "A multifaceted approach to the management of plastic bronchitis after cavopulmonary palliation". Ann Thorac Surg. 98 (2): 634–40. doi:10.1016/j.athoracsur.2014.04.015. PMC 4425256. PMID 24841545.
- ^ Houin, PR; Veress, LA; Rancourt, RC; Hendry-Hofer, TB; Loader, JE; Rioux, JS; Garlick, RB; White, CW (2015). "Intratracheal heparin improves plastic bronchitis due to sulfur mustard analog". Pediatr Pulmonol. 50 (2): 118–26. doi:10.1002/ppul.23043. PMC 4182164. PMID 24692161.
- ^ Parikh, K; Witte, MH; Samson, R; Teodori, M; Carpenter, JB; Lowe, MC; Morgan, W; Hardin, C; Brown, M; Naughton, Y; Sinha, S; Barber, BJ (2012). "Successful treatment of plastic bronchitis with low fat diet and subsequent thoracic duct ligation in child with fontan physiology". Lymphology. 45 (2): 47–52. PMID 23057148.
- ^ Turgut, T; In, E; Özercan, IH; Kaplan, M (2014). "A case of plastic bronchitis". Arch Iran Med. 17 (8): 589–90. PMID 25065285.
- ^ Onoue, Y; Adachi, Y; Ichida, F; Miyawaki, T (2003). "Effective use of corticosteroid in a child with life-threatening plastic bronchitis after Fontan operation". Pediatr Int. 45 (1): 107–9. doi:10.1046/j.1442-200x.2003.01659.x. PMID 12654082. S2CID 39667914.
- ^ Wang, G; Wang, YJ; Luo, FM; Wang, L; Jiang, LL; Wang, L; Mao, B (2006). "Effective use of corticosteroids in treatment of plastic bronchitis with hemoptysis in Chinese adults". Acta Pharmacologica Sinica. 27 (9): 1206–12. doi:10.1111/j.1745-7254.2006.00418.x. PMID 16923342.