Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-19 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:21


1320 Sarcoidosis

■Basic Urine Tests
➣24-h urine calcium indicated when hypercalcemia present

Specific Diagnostic Tests
■ACE level, pulmonary function tests, spirometry & DLCO, ECG, rou-
tine ophthalmologic exam, tuberculin skin test
■Kveim test used rarely and only in selected centers

Imaging
■PA CXR useful for prognostic staging:
➣Stage 0: normal CXR
➣Stage I: bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy (BHL)
➣Stage II: BHL plus pulmonary infiltrates
➣Stage III: pulmonary infiltrates (without BHL)
➣Stage IV: pulmonary fibrosis
■High-resolution chest CT: helpful when parenchyma appears nor-
mal on CXR

Biopsy
■A biopsy is required for definitive Dx in most cases
■Choose proper site (lung, lymph node, skin, lip, granulomatous scar;
E nodosum biopsy does not show granulomas)
■If no easily accessible biopsy site, transbronchial biopsy proce-
dure of choice (overall diagnostic yield 85%); other options: medi-
astinoscopy, VATS, open-lung biopsy

differential diagnosis
■Conditions to exclude:
➣Infections: TB, mycobacteriosis, cryptococcosis, histoplasmo-
sis, coccidiodomycosis, blastomycosis, aspergillosis, P. carinii,
mycoplasma
➣Occupational & environmental: hypersensitivity pneumonitis,
pneumoconiosis (beryllium, titanium, aluminum), drug reac-
tions, aspiration of foreign materials
➣Noninfectious: Wegener’s granulomatosis, chronic interstitial
pneumonia (LIP), necrotizing sarcoid granulomatosis, sarcoid
reaction in lymph node to carcinoma

management
What to Do First
■Establish baseline studies
Free download pdf