Initially, bronchiectasis was described in the early 19th century by Laennec. Bronchiectasis is a chronic lung disease characterized by persistent and lifelong widening of the bronchial airways and weakening of the function mucociliary transport mechanism owing to repeated infection contributing to bacterial invasion and mucus pooling throughout the bronchial tree.[1][2][3] Bronchiectasis is responsible for the significant loss of lung function and one that can result in considerable morbidity and even early mortality.
Historically, the most common cause of bronchiectasis was thought to be an antecedent respiratory infection, often during childhood. The causes are idiopathic, acquired, or infection-related.
Bacterial Infections
Viral Infections
Fungal Infections
Bronchial obstruction
Postinflammatory pneumonitis
Congenital/Genetic
Inflammatory diseases
Pulmonary Diseases
Altered immune response
Others
Bronchiectasis predominance is not clearly understood. Global statistics suggest that the incidence of bronchiectasis has risen over the past few years. It can exist in any age group. However, it generally occurred in childhood during the pre-antibiotic period.[4] Recent evidence shows that bronchiectasis disproportionately affects women and older individuals, and may be contributing to an increasing healthcare burden.
The three most important mechanisms that contribute to the pathogenesis of bronchiectasis are recurrent infections, airway obstruction, and peribronchial fibrosis.
Neutrophils dominate airway inflammation in bronchiectasis, driven by high concentrations of neutrophil chemoattractants such as interleukin-8 (CXCL-8), and leukotriene B4. Airway bacterial colonization occurs because of impaired mucociliary clearance and because of the failure of neutrophil opsonophagocytic killing. Other mechanisms of immune dysfunction include the inability to clear apoptotic cells and invasion of T-cells, with recent reports leading to Th17 cells playing a significant role. Histologic changes in bronchiectasis include cartilage destruction and fibrosis, mucosal and mucous gland hyperplasia, inflammatory cell infiltration, and increased mucous and exudate.
History of a long-standing cough with purulence is typical of bronchiectasis. Patients may report repetitive pulmonary infections that require antibiotics over several years. Patients can also present with progressive dyspnea, intermittent wheezing, hemoptysis, pleuritic chest pain, and associated fatigue and weight loss. The hemoptysis is mild and manifested by blood flecks in the patient's usual purulent sputum, which is occasionally life-threatening. Often patients are diagnosed after many years of symptoms when a chronic cough or hemoptysis becomes debilitating.
Cough: 98%, sputum: 78% (sputum is typically mucoid and relatively odorless), dyspnea: 62%, haemoptysis: 56% to 92%, and pleuritic chest pain: 20% (secondary to chronic coughing).
Physical: Findings are nonspecific.
General findings may include digital clubbing (2% to 3%), cyanosis, plethora, wasting, and weight loss.
Clinical Features of Associated Causative condition:
The recommendations of the British Thoracic Society (BTS) suggest checking for underlying factors involving immunoglobulin tests (IgA, IgM, IgG, and IgE), and testing to exclude ABPA (specific IgE to Aspergillus, IgG to Aspergillus, and eosinophil count).[5][6][7][8] Sputum culture to exclude nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) and assessment of autoantibodies are also suggested. Testing for cystic fibrosis (CF) (sweat test and/or screening for common CF mutations) is recommended for patients aged younger than 40 years or with recurrent Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus isolation, or upper lobe predominant disease irrespective of age.
Alpha-1 Antitrypsin level, Ciliary function analysis, and Serology for HIV if indicated.
Imaging:
Chest radiography is usually the initial study performed in suspected bronchiectasis.
Signs on chest x-ray include the identification of parallel linear densities, tram-track opacities, or ring shadows reflecting thickened and abnormally dilated bronchial walls.
Signs of complications/exacerbations, such as patchy densities due to mucoid impaction (mucus may become of high density due to chronic inspissation) and consolidation, volume loss secondary to mucoid bronchial obstruction or chronic cicatrization are also seen.
In comparison to chest x-ray, CT is both more sensitive and provides more specific information. In addition to making the diagnosis, the pattern of disease on HRCT may enable one to limit the differential to a single/few specific causative entities.
The CT chest signs of bronchiectasis were first described by NAIDICH et al. in 1982.
Bronchial dilation, the cardinal sign of bronchiectasis, is characterized:
Usual Pattern on High-Resolution CT scan Chest
Cylindrical (tram track sign): Dilated airways seen in a horizontal orientation.
Signet-ring: The dilated airway lies adjacent to a pulmonary artery branch giving the appearance of a ring (internal bronchial diameter greater than that of the adjacent pulmonary artery).
Varicose: Implies non-uniform bronchial dilatation. The bronchi resemble like varicose veins. The luminal dilatation is characterized by alternating areas of luminal dilatation and constriction, creating a beaded appearance, and the wall thickening is irregular. This varicose bronchiectasis serves as an intermediate step before the development of grossly dilated cystic airways.
Cystic or saccular: A cluster of thin-walled cystic spaces.
Mosaic lung attenuation: The terminology is used to characterize heterogeneous lung density in the damaged lung segments owing to air trapping and hence has a geographic distribution. On expiration, this result can be produced or exaggerated.
Dilated bronchial arteries: These are best-demonstrated post administration of intravenous contrast. These tortuous vessels extend along the central airways toward the hila. It is these vessels that are often responsible for hemoptysis.
Other Findings:
Lobar collapse
Mycetoma formation (Fungus ball): Aspergillus fumigatus (a fungus) may colonize dilated airways or bullae/cavities. It is a major source of hemoptysis.
Decreased Lung function:
Airflow obstruction: FEV1 decreased
Air trapping: Residual volume increased
Bronchiectasis is treatable but rarely curable.
Treatment Goals:
General Management:
1. Identifying and treating the underlying cause: Immunoglobulin replacement, steroids, and antifungals for ABPA, treatment for NTM, and of CF all represent opportunities to treat the underlying cause specifically, and systematic testing of all patients is recommended in consensus guidelines.[9][10][11]
2. Improve tracheobronchial clearance: Most physicians recommend mucus clearance as the mainstay of therapy in bronchiectasis, Postural drainage consists of adopting a position in which the uppermost lobe is drained, and should be performed for a minimum of 5 to 10 minutes twice a day. Efficiently performed, this is of great value both in reducing the amount of cough and sputum and in preventing recurrent episodes of bronchopulmonary infection.
Deep breathing followed by forced expiratory maneuvers (the "active cycle of breathing" technique) is of help in allowing secretions in the dilated bronchi to gravitate towards the trachea, from which vigorous coughing can clear them. "Percussion" of the chest wall with cupped hands may help to dislodge sputum, and a number of mechanical devices are available, which cause the chest wall to oscillate, thus achieving the same effect.
3. Control infection: The choice of antibiotic should primarily be based on the results of culture and sensitivity. When no specific pathogen is identified, and the patient is not seriously ill, an oral agent like amoxicillin, co-amoxiclav, or macrolides for 2 weeks is sufficient.
Use a higher dose of oral amoxicillin 1 gm twice per day for 2 weeks, especially if colonized with H. influenza. If pseudomonas-colonized, then a 2-week course of ciprofloxacin 750 mg twice per day (with cautious use in the elderly) is reasonable.
For patients with moderate-to-severe symptoms, parenteral antibiotics, such as an aminoglycoside (gentamicin, tobramycin), and antipseudomonal synthetic penicillin, a third-generation cephalosporin, or a fluoroquinolone, may be indicated.
Treatment for Pseudomonas isolates 2 weeks of intravenous (IV) antipseudomonal antibiotics, nebulized colistin for 3 months, or nebulized colistin for 3 months with an additional 4 weeks of oral ciprofloxacin.
Maintenance therapy with intermittent antibiotics is not used routinely in patients with non-CF bronchiectasis, and the decision to use long-term antibiotics should be individualized.
Inhaled aminoglycosides can be of benefit in chronic non-CF bronchiectasis; however, the treatment needs to be of sustained duration.
4. Control reverse airflow obstruction: In patients with airflow obstruction, inhaled bronchodilators and corticosteroids should be used to enhance airway patency.
5. Lifestyle modifications: As with other respiratory diseases, patients with bronchiectasis should be encouraged to stop smoking. Vaccination against influenza and pneumococcal disease is also recommended.
Adjunctive Surgical Treatment:
Surgery is only indicated in a small proportion of cases. These are usually young patients in whom the bronchiectasis is unilateral and confined to a single lobe or segment, as demonstrated by CT.
Surgery is an important adjunct to therapy in some patients with advanced or complicated disease.
Massive hemoptysis: Bronchial artery embolization and/or surgery is first-line therapy for the management of massive hemoptysis.
Bronchiectasis complications include pneumonia, lung abscess, empyema, septicemia, cor pulmonale, respiratory failure, secondary amyloidosis with nephrotic syndrome, and recurrent pleurisy.
Prognosis: The disease is progressive when associated with ciliary dysfunction and cystic fibrosis, and eventually causes respiratory failure in other patients. The prognosis can be relatively good if postural drainage is performed regularly, and antibiotics are used judiciously.
Bronchiectasis is a progressive disorder with no cure. Hence it is best managed by an interprofessional team that includes the primary care physician, nurse practitioner, pulmonologist, infectious disease expert, thoracic surgery, and an internist. The key is to improve symptoms and prevent relapses.[12][13] These patients often develop respiratory infections that require antibiotics. At some point, most patients develop complications that include pneumonia, lung abscess, empyema, septicemia, cor pulmonale, respiratory failure, secondary amyloidosis with nephrotic syndrome, and recurrent pleurisy.
The disease is progressive when associated with ciliary dysfunction and cystic fibrosis and eventually causes respiratory failure. In other patients, the prognosis can be relatively good if postural drainage is performed regularly, and antibiotics are used judiciously.[7]
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