Pulmonary changes on HRCT scans in nonsmoking females with COPD due to wood smoke exposure

To identify and characterize alterations seen on HRCT scans in nonsmoking females with COPD due to wood smoke exposure. We evaluated 42 nonsmoking females diagnosed with wood smoke-related COPD and 31 nonsmoking controls with no history of wood smoke exposure or pulmonary disease. The participants c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Jornal brasileiro de pneumologia 2013-04, Vol.39 (2), p.155-163
Hauptverfasser: Moreira, Maria Auxiliadora Carmo, Barbosa, Maria Alves, Queiroz, Maria Conceição de Castro Antonelli Monteiro de, Teixeira, Kim Ir Sen Santos, Torres, Pedro Paulo Teixeira e Silva, Santana Júnior, Pedro José de, Montadon Júnior, Marcelo Eustáquio, Jardim, José Roberto
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Sprache:eng ; por
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Zusammenfassung:To identify and characterize alterations seen on HRCT scans in nonsmoking females with COPD due to wood smoke exposure. We evaluated 42 nonsmoking females diagnosed with wood smoke-related COPD and 31 nonsmoking controls with no history of wood smoke exposure or pulmonary disease. The participants completed a questionnaire regarding demographic data, symptoms, and environmental exposure. All of the participants underwent spirometry and HRCT of the chest. The COPD and control groups were adjusted for age (23 patients each). Most of the patients in the study group were diagnosed with mild to moderate COPD (83.3%). The most common findings on HRCT scans in the COPD group were bronchial wall thickening, bronchiectasis, mosaic perfusion pattern, parenchymal bands, tree-in-bud pattern, and laminar atelectasis (p < 0.001 vs. the control group for all). The alterations were generally mild and not extensive. There was a positive association between bronchial wall thickening and hour-years of wood smoke exposure. Centrilobular emphysema was uncommon, and its occurrence did not differ between the groups (p = 0.232). Wood smoke exposure causes predominantly bronchial changes, which can be detected by HRCT, even in patients with mild COPD.
ISSN:1806-3713
1806-3756
1806-3756
1806-3713
DOI:10.1590/S1806-37132013000200006