Background
- Permanent dilatation of the small airways, causing persistent microbial infection
Etiologies
- Focal
- Acquired
- Chronic infection
- Granulomatous
- Bacterial: Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas
- Viral
- Obstruction
- Foreign body
- Tumour
- Right middle lobe syndrome
- Swyer-James-MacLeod syndrome (postinfective obliterative bronchiolitis)
- Chronic infection
- Congenital
- Bronchopulmonary sequestration
- Williams-Campbell syndrome (cartilage deficiency)
- Mouner-Kuhn syndrome (tracheobronchmegaly)
- Acquired
- Diffuse
- Genetic
- Cystic fibrosis
- Primary ciliary dyskinesia/Kartagener's syndrome
- Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency
- Young syndrome
- Infectious: non-tuberculous mycobacterium/MAC
- Immunodeficiency: hypogammaglobulinemia
- Inflammatory: allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
- Autoimmune or immune-mediated
- Bronchiolitis obliterans after transplant
- Recurrent aspiration
- Near drowning
- Toxic inhalation
- Miscellaneous
- Yellow nail syndrome
- Postradiation traction bronchiectasis
- IPF
- Genetic
Clinical Manifestations
- Chronic cough (98%)
- Daily sputum (78%)
- Rhinosinusitis (73%)
- Dyspnea (62%)
- Hemoptysis (27%)
- Recurrent pleurisy (20%)
Investigations
- Labs
- CBC, quantitative immunoglobulins, and HIV testing to rule out immunodeficiency
- Sputum culture for bacteria, mycobacteria, and fungi; consider BAL
- Sweat chloride testing +/- genetic testing to rule out CF
- Alpha-1 antitrypsin levels (<11 in deficiency)
- Nasal brush/biopsy to rule out ciliary dyskinesia
- Imaging
- High-resolution CT
- Signet-ring sign (airway >1.5x blood vessel) is best sign
- Tram-tracking
- High-resolution CT
- Other
- PFTs
- Bronchoscopy
- Swallowing assessment to rule out aspiration
CT1
Cause | Distribution | Findings |
---|---|---|
Infection/Aspiration | ||
Recurrent aspiration | lower lung zone, peripheral | bronchial wall thickening, aspirated material in bronchi, presence of hiatal hernia |
ABPA | upper lung zone, central | high-attenuation mucous plugging |
Tuberculosis | upper lung zone, focal or unilateral | asymmetric upper lobe involvement, tree-in-bud nodules |
Non-tuberculous mycobacteria | middle lobe and lingular | more common in men with COPD or in thin, older women; indolent symptoms |
Swyer-James syndrome | focal or unilateral | bronchial wall thickening, increased lucency in the small lung due to air trapping |
Congenital | ||
Cystic fibrosis | upper lung zone, central | extensive cystic and cylindrical bronchiectasis |
Primary ciliary dyskinesia | middle lobe and lingular | situs inversus, chronic sinusitis, and bronchiectasis |
Mounier-Kuhn syndrome | central | absence or atrophy of the elastic fibers and smooth muscle in trachea and main bronchial wall |
Williams-Campbell syndrome | midorder bronch | cartilage deficiency in the midorder bronchi |
Bronchial atresia | focal or unilateral | most common location |
Fibrosing Diffuse Disease | ||
Sarcoidosis | upper lung zone, central | bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy, perilymphatic nodules |
Pulmonary fibrosis | lower lung zone, peripheral | varicoid bronchiectasis, architectural distortion, honeycombing in UIP |
ARDS | middle lobe and lingular | varicoid bronchectasis, diffuse ground-glass opacities |
Endobronchial/Peribronchial Lesions | ||
Endobronchial tumour | focal or unilateral | |
Foreign body | focal or unilateral | |
Stricture | focal or unilateral | |
Other | ||
Bronchiolitis obliterans | diffuse | significant cause of post-transplantation morbidity and mortality; diffuse air trapping |
Management
Acute Exacerbation
- Send sputum cultures every time
- Cover empirically with usual pneumonia treatment x 14 days
- Add Pseudomonas or MRSA coverage if needed
- Consider prednisone if asthma or ABPA
Chronic Management
- Chest physiotherapy it most important
- Mucous (questionable utility outside of CF)
- Hypertonic saline
- Mannitol
- DNAse/Pulmozyme is BAD outside of CF
- Mucomyst
- Antiinflammatory
- Consider inhaled bronchodilators if responsive
- Consider azithromycin 500mg po MWF
- Inhaled antimicrobials, if colonozed with Pseudomonas and more than 3 exacerbations annually
- Inhaled tobramycin
- Inhaled colistin
- Possibly inhaled ciprofloxacin
- Surgery: resection or transplantation can sometimes be considered
- Supportive
- Annual flu vaccine
- Smoking cessation
- Pulmonary rehabilitation
- GERD treatment
Further Reading
- British Thoracic Society Guideline for bronchiectasis in adults. Thorax. 2019;74:1-69. doi: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2018-212463
References
- ^ Bethany Milliron, Travis S. Henry, Srihari Veeraraghavan, Brent P. Little. Bronchiectasis: Mechanisms and Imaging Clues of Associated Common and Uncommon Diseases. RadioGraphics. 2015;35(4):1011-1030. doi:10.1148/rg.2015140214.