Publication | Closed Access
Sarcoidlike lung granulomatosis induced by aluminum dusts.
81
Citations
15
References
1987
Year
Sarcoidlike Lung GranulomatosisAluminum ParticlesLung DepositionPulmonary PathologyOccupational Lung DiseasesInflammatory Lung DiseaseLung InflammationEnvironmental Lung DiseasesImmunologyPulmonary Alveolar ProteinosisPathologyAluminum PowdersPulmonary FibrosisInfectious Respiratory DiseaseMedicineMatrikinesPulmonary Disease
Interstitial lung disease developed in a 32-yr-old chemist after working 8 yr in a dusty atmosphere containing aluminum powders. Bronchoalveolar lavage disclosed a helper T-lymphocyte alveolitis, and transbronchial lung biopsies showed sarcoidlike epithelioid granulomas. These granulomas contained dust identified by mineralogic analyses as consisting mainly of aluminum particles. Nasal and liver biopsies and a Kveim test did not reveal extrapulmonary granulomatous infiltration. An extensive immunologic work-up showed none of the abnormalities classically seen in sarcoidosis, but peripheral blood lymphocytes exhibited blastic transformation in the presence of soluble aluminum compounds. About 1 yr after cessation of exposure, a chest radiograph and lung function tests remained essentially unchanged, but signs of alveolitis disappeared. This observation suggests that aluminum may cause granulomatous lung disease accompanied by a helper T-lymphocyte alveolitis, similar to that of berylliosis and sarcoidosis. Further observations would be necessary to show if this constitutes an early stage of aluminum-induced fibrosis (aluminum lung).
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1