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About the Lungs
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Bronchial Asthma
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C O P D
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Air
Pollution \
Bronchiectasis
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Community
Acquired Pneumonia
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Sarcoidosis \
C F C
inhalers
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Occupational Lung diseases
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Lung
Cancer \
Interstitial Lung disease
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Pulmonary function tests
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Pulmonary surgeries
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Allergic Rhinitis
Intestinal Lung Disease
WHAT IS FIBROSING ALVEOLITIS?
Fibrosing alveolitis is a condition which is
caused by cells, which are normally involved in the
body’s own defense against infection, instead causing
inflammation, injury and scarring in the lungs. Scars
serve a good purpose in the skin where they heal
injured areas but in the lung, scar tissue prevents
the lung performing its normal function of taking
oxygen from the air into the blood and removing carbon
dioxide from the blood.
WHO CAN GET THE DISEASE?
Fibrosing alveolitis seems to be on the increase
although it is not clear why this is so. It can affect
people of any age but the most common age at which the
disease strikes is in the 50s and men and women are
equally affected. We do not know what causes Fibrosing
alveolitis, but do know that it is not an infection,
that it cannot be caught from others and neither is it
a form of cancer.
Exposure to certain occupational dusts (e.g. asbestos,
hard metal alloy), can produce disease which is
identical to fibrosing alveolitis and most people with
the disease are or have been cigarette smokers.
However, for most people the specific cause or
provoking factors cannot be identified.
WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS?
The most common symptom is breathlessness,
particularly on exercise such as walking up hills or
stairs. Because it may come on in the mid 50s,
patients often attribute this to middle age. It is
important to stress that the onset of breathlessness
should be investigated rather than to assume it is
merely part of an ageing process. If it remains
untreated the condition can often worsen and lead to
permanent and progressive breathlessness. Less common
symptoms include a dry cough, and some people may
notice a change in the shape of their finger and toe
nails. This feature is present in the majority of
patients who develop this lung disease.
HOW IS THE DIAGNOSIS MADE?
Investigations will usually include a chest
radiograph and a set of breathing tests. These require
the individual to breathe in and out of a number of
machines which allow an assessment to be made of how
well the lungs are working. Blood tests are also
usually performed. A special form of X-ray (known as a
CT scan) which produces a three dimensional picture of
the lungs, may be requested. It may be necessary to
obtain samples of lung tissue for examination in the
laboratory. This is usually done by bronchoscopy which
involves passing a small flexible telescope down the
breathing tubes with the patient lightly sedated. For
many people these tests provide the necessary
information for planning treatment, but in some people
a larger sample of lung tissue, taken by a surgeon
under a general anesthetic, is needed before treatment
can be considered.
TREATMENT
It is very important that the disease is
identified and investigated at the earliest possible
stage so that treatment to reduce progressive lung
scarring can be considered at a time before the
patient is severely disabled. The most common form of
treatment is steroids, usually a short period of high
dose therapy followed by a longer period of treatment
on lower doses. A few people may experience side
effects: therefore a very careful balance between the
potential benefit of treatment and the risk of side
effects needs to be weighed up before recommendations
are made. Other drugs which may be used to treat the
disease are known as immunosuppressants. Once maximum
response has been achieved, the aim is to maintain
that response while reducing therapy. The need for
treatment in fibrosing alveolitis is usually lifelong.
This is because the condition is suppressed rather
than cured in the majority of cases and the long term
aim is to keep the disease suppressed on the smallest
possible dosage of treatment. Very occasionally drugs
may be discontinued completely but this is the
exception rather than the rule.
For further details contact
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Address |
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33, (old No. 20) Lake View Road, (Above Doraiswamy
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West Mambalam, Chennai - 600 033. India. |
| Phone |
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44 2474 8616, Tele Fax: 91 44 2474 8616 |
| e-mail |
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rrfindia@gmail.com
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