Filed under: Respiratory Health
Pulmonary fibrosis is a serious disease that causes progressive scarring of your lung tissue.
The current thinking is that pulmonary fibrosis begins with repeated injury to the tissue within and between the tiny air sacs (alveoli) in your lungs. The damage eventually leads to scarring (fibrosis), which stiffens your lungs and makes breathing difficult. The most common symptoms are shortness of breath and a dry cough.
Current treatments for pulmonary fibrosis include medications and therapy to improve lung function and quality of life. A number of new therapies for pulmonary fibrosis are in clinical trials. In the meantime, a lung transplant may be an option for some people with pulmonary fibrosis.
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Signs and symptoms of pulmonary fibrosis include:
The most common pulmonary fibrosis symptoms are shortness of breath, especially during or after physical activity, and a dry cough. These often don't appear until the disease is advanced, and irreversible lung damage has already occurred. Even then, you may downplay your symptoms, attributing them to aging, being out of shape or the lingering effects of a cold.
Breathing problems usually become progressively worse, and eventually you're likely to get out of breath during routine activities — getting dressed, talking on the phone, even eating. At this point, symptoms are impossible to ignore.
The course of pulmonary fibrosis — and the severity of symptoms — can vary considerably from person to person. Some people become ill very quickly with severe disease. Others have more-moderate symptoms that grow worse over a period of months or years.
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The process of breathing
Each time you inhale, air travels to your lungs through two major airways called bronchi. Inside your lungs, the bronchi subdivide like the branches of a tree into a million smaller airways (bronchioles) that finally end in clusters of tiny air sacs (alveoli). You have about 300 million alveoli in each lung. Within the walls of the air sacs are small blood vessels (capillaries) where oxygen is added to your blood, and carbon dioxide — a waste product of metabolism — is removed.
What happens in pulmonary fibrosis
In pulmonary fibrosis, microscopic damage to the alveoli causes irreversible scarring of the paper-thin tissue (interstitium) that lines and separates the air sacs. Normally, the air sacs are highly elastic, expanding and contracting like small balloons with each breath. But scarring makes the interstitial tissue stiff and thick and the air sacs less flexible. Instead of being soft and elastic, the air sacs have the texture of a dry, stiff sponge, making breathing much more difficult.
This buildup of scar tissue isn't normal — ordinarily, your body makes just enough tissue to repair damage. But in pulmonary fibrosis, the repair process goes awry.
For people with pulmonary fibrosis, healing may be thwarted in other ways, too. Normally, the body forms new blood vessels to help bring oxygen and nutrients to injured cells. For instance, if you cut your finger, your body sends nutrients to the finger to help promote healing. But in people with pulmonary fibrosis, some of the new blood vessels develop away from or are occluded by the scar tissue.
What damages the lungs?
Hundreds of factors can cause the lung damage that eventually leads to pulmonary fibrosis. Some of the most common include:
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: When the cause isn't known
The list of substances and conditions that can lead to pulmonary fibrosis is long. Even so, in most cases, the cause is never found. Pulmonary fibrosis with no known cause is called idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
Researchers have several theories about what might trigger idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, including viruses and exposure to tobacco smoke. And because one type of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis runs in families, heredity also is thought to play a role, even in people who don't directly inherit the disease.
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
Factors that make you more susceptible to pulmonary fibrosis include:
Risk factors for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
Even though the causes of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis aren't known, researchers have identified certain factors that seem to increase your risk:
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
Complications of pulmonary fibrosis may include:
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
If your primary care doctor suspects a serious lung problem, you're likely to be referred to a pulmonologist, a doctor who specializes in lung disorders. To help you get the most from your appointment:
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
Diagnosing pulmonary fibrosis can be extremely challenging. The difference between idiopathic and nonidiopathic forms of the disease isn't always clear, and the naming and classification systems for both have historically been confusing and controversial. In addition, many medical conditions, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma and even heart failure, can mimic pulmonary fibrosis, so doctors must rule these out before making a definitive diagnosis.
A complete medical history, physical exam and even a chest X-ray aren't enough to diagnose pulmonary fibrosis, but they can help exclude other conditions. For that reason, you may have tests such as:
Often, though, pulmonary fibrosis can be definitively diagnosed only by examining a small amount of lung tissue (biopsy) in a laboratory. The tissue sample may be obtained in one of these ways:
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
The lung scarring that occurs in pulmonary fibrosis can't be reversed, and no current treatment has proved effective in stopping the ultimate progression of the disease. Some treatments, though, may improve symptoms temporarily or slow the disease's progress. Others help improve quality of life.
Medications
Many people diagnosed with pulmonary fibrosis are initially treated with a corticosteroid (prednisone), sometimes in combination with other drugs that suppress the immune system, such as methotrexate or cyclosporine. None of these combinations has proved very effective. Adding N-acetylcysteine, a derivative of a natural amino acid, to prednisone may slow the disease in some people. And in clinical trials, the drug pirfenidone has been shown to improve lung function and prevent destruction of lung tissue.
Prednisone and other immunosuppressant medications can also cause serious side effects, including diabetes, glaucoma, reduced production of red blood cells, skin cancer and lymphoma. For that reason, treatment is usually discontinued if there's no improvement after six months. Although some people improve temporarily on immunosuppressant drugs, it's not clear why some people respond and others don't.
Lung transplantation
Lung transplantation may be an option of last resort for younger people with severe pulmonary fibrosis who haven't benefited from other treatment options. In order to be considered for a transplant, you must agree to quit smoking if you smoke, be healthy enough to undergo surgery and post-transplant treatments, be willing and able to follow the medical program outlined by the rehabilitation and transplant team, and have the patience and emotional strength and support to undergo the wait for a donor organ. The last requirement is particularly important because donor organs are in short supply.
Other treatment approaches
Other pulmonary fibrosis treatments focus on improving quality of life. They include:
Pulmonary rehabilitation. This is a formal program for people with chronic lung disease that includes, but goes far beyond, medical management. The aim of pulmonary rehabilitation is not only to treat a disease or even improve daily functioning, but also to help people with pulmonary fibrosis live full, satisfying lives. To that end, pulmonary rehabilitation programs focus on exercise, on teaching you how to breathe more efficiently, on education, and on emotional support and nutritional counseling.
Most often, this multifaceted approach requires a team of health care professionals that may include a doctor, nurse, rehabilitation specialist, dietitian and social worker. Programs can vary widely, however. Your doctor can usually tell you about pulmonary rehabilitation programs in your area. Or contact the American Lung Association for more information.
Treatments under investigation
A number of treatments for pulmonary fibrosis are being developed or are in clinical trials. You can find an extensive listing of clinical trials in the National Institutes of Health clinical trial database on the Web. You can also contact the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute for more information. If you think you might be interested in participating in a clinical trial, your doctor can help you find an appropriate program.
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
Being actively involved in your own treatment and staying as healthy as possible are essential to living with pulmonary fibrosis. For that reason, it's important to:
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.


