| [Search-frames] | [Search-no frames] | [UCHC Home] | [©] | [Feed Back] | [About] |
| Etiology: • Cigarette smoking responsible for vast majority of centriacinar emphysema |
| Pathogenesis: • At terminal bronchiole level air flow suddenly diminishes dropping particulates into adjacent alveoli • Neutrophil and macrophage elastases turned on by particulates or other components of smoke • Septal destruction secondary to excess elastase and protease activity |
| Epidemiology: • Men who smoke heavily • Develops over many years becoming clinically significant in later life |
| General Gross Description: • Centrilobular or smoker1s emphysema shows air space enlargement mixed with normal airspaces • Largest spaces found in upper portions of all lobes • Black discoloration of walls of spaces • Bronchovascular structures stand out from the parenchyma due to loss of parenchymal tissue • Pillowy soft lungs that may cover the heart |
| General Microscopic Description: • Enlarged air spaces with broken septae in the central portion of the acinus around the terminal bronchiole • Septal tips have blunt ends • Little fibrosis • Many carbon laden macrophages |
| Clinical Correlations: |
| References: periphery. |