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Title

Non‐necrotizing granulomatous pneumonitis and chronic pleuritis in soldiers deployed to Southwest Asia.

Authors

Gordetsky, Jennifer; Kim, Christine; Miller, Robert F; Mehrad, Mitra

Abstract

Aims: Reports of respiratory illnesses among soldiers returning from Southwest Asia have been described. During deployment to Southwest Asia, soldiers are exposed to various respiratory hazards, including dust storms, smoke from burn pits and industrial air pollutants. A few studies have reported increased rates of constrictive bronchiolitis and asthma in these patients. We sought to expand upon the pathological findings in this cohort. Methods and results: Lung biopsies from veterans of Southwest Asia were identified and re‐reviewed. All patients had undergone pulmonary function tests and chest high‐resolution CT imaging with no significant findings. Overall, 59 patients with a history of inhalational exposure to at least one of the following were identified: smoke from burn pit, dust storm and sulphur plant fire. Samples included video‐assisted thoracoscopic lung biopsies (57 of 59, 96.6%) and cryobiopsies (two of 59, 3.4%). Patients were predominantly male (54 of 59, 91.5%) with an age range of 24–55 years (mean and median = 35). Non‐necrotising, poorly formed granulomas were identified in 22 cases (22 of 59, 37.2%). The granulomas were mainly bronchiolocentric and were associated with chronic lymphoplasmacytic bronchiolitis, similar to hypersensitivity pneumonitis (HP). Pleural reaction in the form of focal chronic lymphocytic pleuritis and/or focal pleural adhesions were seen in 43 of 57 (75.4%) biopsies. Conclusions: To our knowledge, this is the first study to report pleural reaction as well as features of HP in this population, suggesting that pleural reaction and HP may be part of the spectrum of Southwest Asia deployment‐related lung diseases.

Subjects

MIDDLE East; PLEURISY; MUSTARD gas; HYPERSENSITIVITY pneumonitis; PNEUMONIA; LUNG diseases; DUST storms

Publication

Histopathology, 2020, Vol 77, Issue 3, p453

ISSN

0309-0167

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/his.14135

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