Abstract

Follow-up of patients with subclinical inflammatory alveolitis associated with systemic diseases may represent the best opportunity to study the mechanisms responsible for the development of interstitial lung disease. We report a seven-year sequential pulmonary evaluation of one patient with clinically isolated gastric sarcoidosis, treated by gastrectomy, without evidence of clinical, radiologic or functional lung impairment and with chronic subclinical lymphocyte alveolitis. Five years later, she developed an overt interstitial lung disease characterized by fine crackles, diffuse parenchymal opacities and impaired diffusing capacity, preceded by an expansion of polymorphonuclear neutrophils in the lower respiratory tract, raising the hypothesis that these cells may be implicated in the pathogenesis of pulmonary derangement in sarcoidosis. This observation illustrates the importance of pulmonary follow-up of unaffected patients with systemic diseases and with subclinical inflammatory alveolitis, and the potential predictive value of neutrophil alveolitis in the pulmonary outcome of these patients.

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