Pulmonary edema
Pulmonary edema is a broad descriptive term and is usually defined as an abnormal accumulation of fluid in the extravascular compartments of the lung 1.
Clinical presentation
The clinical presentation of pulmonary edema includes:
- acute breathlessness
- orthopnea
- paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea (PND)
- foaming at the mouth
- distress
Pathology
One method of classifying pulmonary edema is as four main categories on the basis of pathophysiology which include:
- increased hydrostatic pressure edema
- two pathophysiological and radiological phases are recognized in the development of pressure edema
- these phases are virtually identical for left heart failure and fluid overload
- permeability edema with diffuse alveolar damage (DAD)
- permeability edema without diffuse alveolar damage (DAD)
- mixed edema due to simultaneous increased hydrostatic pressure and permeability changes
Etiology
Broadly causes can be classified as cardiogenic and non-cardiogenic:
- cardiogenic pulmonary edema:
- left heart failure
- mitral regurgitation 5
- aortic stenosis
- arrhythmias
- myocardial pathology
- non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema:
- fluid overload
- pulmonary edema with acute asthma
- postobstructive pulmonary edema / postintubation pulmonary edema/negative pressure pulmonary edema
- pulmonary edema in pulmonary thromboembolism
- pulmonary edema due to air embolism
- pulmonary veno-occlusive disease
- near-drowning pulmonary edema / asphyxiation pulmonary edema
- ARDS: pulmonary edema with diffuse alveolar damage
- heroin-induced pulmonary edema
- pulmonary edema following administration of cytokines
- transfusion-related acute lung injury
- high-altitude pulmonary edema
- neurogenic pulmonary edema
- reperfusion pulmonary edema
- pulmonary edema following lung transplantation
- re-expansion pulmonary edema
- post-pneumonectomy pulmonary edema
- post lung volume reduction pulmonary edema
- pulmonary edema from anti-snake venom administration 8
- activity-related
- acute selenium toxicity
The causes of non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema can be recalled with the following mnemonic: NOTCARDIAC.
Radiographic features
Plain radiograph
The chest radiograph remains the most practical and useful method of radiologically assessing and quantifying pulmonary edema 3,4.
Features useful for broadly assessing pulmonary edema on a plain chest radiograph include:
- upper lobe pulmonary venous diversion (stag's antler sign)
- increased cardiothoracic ratio/cardiac silhouette size: useful for assessing for an underlying cardiogenic cause or association
- features of pulmonary interstitial edema:
- peribronchial cuffing and perihilar haze
- septal (Kerley) lines
- thickening of interlobar fissures
- features of pulmonary alveolar edema:
- air space opacification classically in a batwing distribution
- may have air bronchograms
- pleural effusions and fluid in interlobar fissures (including 'vanishing' pulmonary pseudotumor)
There is a general progression of signs on a plain radiograph that occurs as the pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) increases (see pulmonary edema grading). Whether all or only some of these features can be appreciated on the plain chest radiograph, depend on the specific etiology 1. Furthermore, pulmonary edema is usually a bilateral process, but it may uncommonly appear to be unilateral in certain situations and pathologies (see unilateral pulmonary edema).
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