Tree-in-Bud Pattern of Pulmonary Tuberculosis on Thin-Section CT: Pathological Implications.

Korean J Radiol

University of Fukui, School of Medical Sciences, Bunkyo, Fukui-shi, Fukui 910-8507, Japan.

Published: April 2019


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Article Abstract

The "tree-in-bud-pattern" of images on thin-section lung CT is defined by centrilobular branching structures that resemble a budding tree. We investigated the pathological basis of the tree-in-bud lesion by reviewing the pathological specimens of bronchograms of normal lungs and contract radiographs of the post-mortem lungs manifesting active pulmonary tuberculosis. The tree portion corresponds to the intralobular inflammatory bronchiole, while the bud portion represents filling of inflammatory substances within alveolar ducts, which are larger than the corresponding bronchioles. Inflammatory bronchiole per se represents the "tree" (stem) and inflammatory alveolar ducts constitute the "buds" or clubbing. "Clusters of micronodules", seen on 7-mm thick post-mortem radiographs with tuberculosis proved to be clusters of tree-in-bud lesions within the three-dimensional space of secondary pulmonary lobule based on radiological/pathological correlation. None of the post-mortem lung specimens showed findings of lung parenchymal lymphatics involvement.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6082770PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3348/kjr.2018.19.5.859DOI Listing

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