Review Article
Granulomatous Vasculitides of the Lung A Clinicopathologic Approach to Diagnosis and Treatment
Abstract
ABSTRACT The granulomatous vasculitides of the lung are uncommon. Overlap of their clinical and histopathologic features may create a confusing picture for the clinician and pathologist. This confusion is of concern because therapy differs depending on the exact diagnosis, with concomitant variations in associated drug toxicity. An integrated clinical and pathologic approach must be used to arrive at a prompt and accurate diagnosis. The true granulomatous vasculitides, a group that includes Wegeners granulomatosis, allergic granulomatosis and angiitis (Churg-Strauss syndrome), and necrotizing sarcoid granulomatosis, have various degrees of systemic involvement. Therapy is mainly immunosuppressive, and prognosis is generally good. The lymphoproliferative granulomatous vasculitides, which include benign lymphocytic angiitis and granulomatosis, lymphomatoid granulomatosis, and malignant lymphoma with angioinvasion, are progressively abnormal lymphoproliferative processes. Therapy may require combination chemotherapy, and prognosis is often poor.This content is limited to qualifying members.
Existing members, please login first
If you have an existing account please login now to access this article or view purchase options.
Purchase only this article ($25)
Create a free account, then purchase this article to download or access it online for 24 hours.
Purchase an SMJ online subscription ($75)
Create a free account, then purchase a subscription to get complete access to all articles for a full year.
Purchase a membership plan (fees vary)
Premium members can access all articles plus recieve many more benefits. View all membership plans and benefit packages.