Opacity in the Lungs (Revised)

  • What is it:
  • Opacity in the lungs refers to:
      • An area of increased density visible on imaging,
      • representing a reduction in the
        • normal air content of the lung, and
      • caused by a wide range of pathological processes.
    • It can represent:
      • Consolidation (airspace filling), or
      • An area of atelectasis (collapsed lung tissue),
        • which are more commonly well-defined opacities.
    • The term “opacity” is often used as a
      • generalized descriptor
        • when a more specific diagnosis or description cannot be made.
      • It has replaced the use of the term “infiltrate”,
        • providing a more neutral and descriptive alternative.
  • Etymology:
    • Derived from the Latin word opacitas, meaning “shaded or dark,” referring to reduced transparency of the lung field on imaging.
  • AKA:
    • Lung opacity, Pulmonary opacity, Airspace opacity.
  • How does it appear on each relevant imaging modality:
    • Chest X-ray:
      • Appears as a region of increased whiteness compared to surrounding normal lung.
      • It may be well-defined or poorly defined
    • Chest CT:
      • Parts: Opacities can involve the lung parenchyma, pleura, or airways.
      • Size: May vary from small focal opacities (e.g., nodules) to large areas of consolidation or atelectasis.
      • Shape: Can be round (e.g., nodule), patchy (e.g., consolidation), or linear (e.g., atelectasis or interstitial thickening).
      • Position:
        • Can be localized (e.g., segmental or lobar) or diffuse.
        • Peripheral (e.g., organizing pneumonia) or central (e.g., pulmonary edema).
      • Character:
        • Solid, ground-glass, or mixed attenuation.
      • Time:
        • Opacities may resolve (e.g., infections), persist (e.g., fibrosis), or progress (e.g., malignancy).
    • PET-CT:
      • Recommended for lesions larger than 7 mm.
      • Identifies:
        • Active lesions with increased metabolic activity (e.g., malignancy, acute infection/inflammation).
        • Cold lesions with low metabolic activity (e.g., chronic infections, slow-growing neoplasms).
  • These findings reflect:
    • Airspace processes:
      • Infection:
        • Bacterial pneumonia (e.g., lobar consolidation).
        • Tuberculosis (focal or cavitating opacities).
        • Fungal infections (e.g., aspergillosis).
      • Inflammation:
        • Organizing pneumonia.
        • Hypersensitivity pneumonitis.
    • Interstitial processes:
      • Pulmonary fibrosis.
      • Sarcoidosis (reticulonodular opacities).
    • Neoplastic processes:
      • Primary lung cancer (e.g., mass or irregular opacity).
      • Metastatic nodules (e.g., multiple opacities).
    • Circulatory processes:
      • Pulmonary edema (central opacities with batwing distribution).
      • Pulmonary hemorrhage.
  • Differential diagnosis:
    • Infection:
      • Bacterial pneumonia (e.g., Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus).
      • Viral pneumonia (e.g., COVID-19, influenza).
      • Tuberculosis (cavitating or nodular opacities).
    • Inflammation:
      • Hypersensitivity pneumonitis (diffuse ground-glass opacities).
      • Organizing pneumonia (peripheral or patchy opacities).
    • Neoplasm:
      • Primary lung cancer (e.g., spiculated opacity or mass).
      • Metastatic disease (e.g., nodular opacities).
    • Circulatory:
      • Pulmonary edema (central, fluffy opacities).
      • Pulmonary hemorrhage (diffuse or patchy opacities).
    • Iatrogenic:
      • Radiation pneumonitis.
      • Drug-induced lung disease (e.g., amiodarone toxicity).
    • Immune-related:
      • Sarcoidosis (perilymphatic distribution of opacities).
      • Eosinophilic pneumonia.
    • Congenital or inherited:
      • Pulmonary sequestration (associated opacity).
      • Cystic fibrosis (mucus plugging with airspace opacities).
  • Recommendations:
    • Correlate imaging findings with clinical history and physical examination.
    • Perform high-resolution CT to better characterize the morphology, distribution, and density of the opacity.
    • Use PET-CT for metabolic evaluation of opacities larger than 7 mm to distinguish active from cold lesions.
    • Biopsy or bronchoscopy may be necessary for suspected neoplastic, granulomatous, or inflammatory causes.
  • Key points and pearls:
    • The term “opacity” is non-specific and encompasses a broad differential diagnosis, requiring correlation with clinical, laboratory, and imaging findings.
    • The distribution of opacities (e.g., focal, diffuse, central, or peripheral) is critical for narrowing the differential.
    • Consolidation and atelectasis are more commonly well-defined opacities, helping distinguish them from diffuse or poorly defined ground-glass opacities.
    • Time-dependent changes (e.g., resolution, persistence, or progression) provide important clues to the underlying cause.