Peribronchial Nodules
- What is it:
- Peribronchial nodules refer to
- multiple nodules located
- around the bronchi or bronchioles,
- outside the bronchial lumen.
- These nodules often reflect
- airway-adjacent
- inflammation,
- infection,
- lymphatic involvement, or
- neoplastic processes.
- The distribution aligns with
- lymphatics,
- bronchovascular bundles, or
- peribronchial tissues.
- Etymology:
- Derived from the Greek word bronchos (windpipe) and the Latin prefix peri- (around), indicating the nodules? location surrounding the bronchi.
- AKA:
- Peribronchovascular nodules.
- How does it appear on each relevant imaging modality:
- Chest X-ray:
- Ill-defined opacities or nodular densities along bronchovascular bundles.
- May present as subtle reticulonodular patterns.
- Chest CT:
- Parts: Nodules clustered along the peribronchial tissues and bronchovascular bundles.
- Size: Typically small (<10 mm), but size may vary based on the underlying cause.
- Shape: Round, oval, or irregular;
- Position:
- Follows peribronchial and bronchovascular distributions, sparing the centrilobular and subpleural regions.
- Character:
- Nodules may be solid or associated with thickened bronchial walls or surrounding ground-glass opacities.
- Time:
- May resolve with treatment (e.g., infection) or progress in chronic conditions (e.g., neoplastic or inflammatory causes).
- PET-CT:
- Useful for assessing metabolic activity in peribronchial nodules to distinguish benign from malignant processes.
- Differential diagnosis:
- Infection:
- Tuberculosis with peribronchial spread.
- Fungal infections (e.g., histoplasmosis, aspergillosis).
- Viral or bacterial infections with peribronchial lymphadenitis.
- Inflammation:
- Sarcoidosis (perilymphatic granulomas).
- Hypersensitivity pneumonitis (chronic phase).
- Neoplasm:
- Lymphangitic carcinomatosis.
- Peribronchial metastases.
- Circulatory:
- Pulmonary edema with peribronchial cuffing or nodules.
- Inhalational exposure:
- Pneumoconioses (e.g., silicosis, coal workers’ pneumoconiosis).
- Immune-related:
- Eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA).
- Iatrogenic:
- Post-radiotherapy nodules.
- Congenital or inherited:
- Cystic fibrosis (mucus-associated nodules).
- Recommendations:
- Perform high-resolution CT to evaluate the peribronchial distribution and associated airway abnormalities.
- Consider bronchoscopy with lavage or biopsy for infectious or inflammatory etiologies.
- Assess for systemic involvement (e.g., sarcoidosis, malignancy) with laboratory and imaging correlation.
- PET-CT may help differentiate active neoplastic or granulomatous causes from benign conditions.
- Key points and pearls:
- Peribronchial nodules often follow a lymphatic or bronchovascular pattern, differentiating them from centrilobular or random distributions.
- The “tree-in-bud” pattern is a hallmark feature of infectious or inflammatory causes involving small airways.
- Chronic or progressive nodules warrant evaluation for sarcoidosis, lymphangitic spread, or pneumoconioses.
- Time-dependent changes, such as resolution or progression, are critical for narrowing the differential diagnosis.
TCV