Reticular interstitial pattern
Updates to Article Attributes
Body
was changed:
Reticular interstitalinterstitial pattern is one of the patterns of linear opacification in the lung. It can either mean a plain film or HRCT/CT feature.
Pathology
Causes
Reticulation can be subdivided by the size of the intervening pulmonary lucency into fine, medium and course. Diseases with a predominantly reticular pattern can be subdivided by the acuteness of their presentation.
-
predominantly reticular: acute, not a common pattern
-
pulmonary oedema
- heart failure
- fluid overload
- nephropathy
- infection
- viral
- mycoplasma
- Pneumocystis
- malaria
- drug reactions
-
pulmonary oedema
-
predominantly reticular: chronic
- post-infectious scarring
- tuberculosis (post-primary)
- histoplasmosis (chronic)
- coccidioidomycosis (chronic)
- Pneumocystis
- chronic interstitial oedema
- mitral valve disease
- collagen vascular disorders
- rheumatoid lung
- scleroderma
- post-infectious scarring
- idiopathic pulmonary haemorrhage
- granulomatous disease
- pulmonary neoplasms
- lymphangitis carcinomatosis
- pulmonary lymphoma and other lymphocytic disorders
- lymphocytic interstitial pneumonitis
- inhalational lung disease
- drug reactions
- nitrofurantoin related lung changes
- chemotherapeutic agents
- amiodarone lung toxicity
- radiation pneumonitis
- idiopathic
Specific descriptors
-<p><strong>Reticular interstital pattern </strong>is one of the patterns of <a href="/articles/reticular-and-linear-pulmonary-opacification">linear opacification</a> in the <a href="/articles/lung">lung</a>. It can either mean a plain film or HRCT/CT feature. </p><h4>Pathology</h4><h5>Causes</h5><p>Reticulation can be subdivided by the size of the intervening pulmonary lucency into fine, medium and course. Diseases with a predominantly reticular pattern can be subdivided by the acuteness of their presentation.</p><ul>- +<p><strong>Reticular interstitial pattern </strong>is one of the patterns of <a href="/articles/reticular-and-linear-pulmonary-opacification">linear opacification</a> in the <a href="/articles/lung">lung</a>. It can either mean a plain film or HRCT/CT feature. </p><h4>Pathology</h4><h5>Causes</h5><p>Reticulation can be subdivided by the size of the intervening pulmonary lucency into fine, medium and course. Diseases with a predominantly reticular pattern can be subdivided by the acuteness of their presentation.</p><ul>
-<li><a href="/articles/subpleural-reticulation-1">sub pleural reticulation</a></li>- +<li><a href="/articles/subpleural-reticulation-1">subpleural reticulation</a></li>