Embryology & Overview - Lung Bud Bloopers
- Lung Origin: Ventral foregut diverticulum (4th week).
- Developmental Stages (📌 Every Pulmonologist Can See Alveoli):
- Embryonic (Wk 3-7): Lung bud, trachea, bronchi; Tracheoesophageal Fistula (TEF) risk.
- Pseudoglandular (Wk 5-17): Bronchial tree to terminal bronchioles; Gland-like. Congenital Pulmonary Airway Malformation (CPAM) forms.
- Canalicular (Wk 16-26): Respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts; Surfactant production.
- Saccular (Wk 24-Term): Terminal sacs (primitive alveoli) develop.
- Alveolar (Late fetal - 8 yrs): Mature alveoli proliferate.
- Anomaly Types (due to developmental errors):
- Parenchymal (CPAM, sequestration)
- Airway (Tracheal/bronchial atresia)
- Vascular (Partial Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return - PAPVR)
⭐ Congenital Pulmonary Airway Malformation (CPAM), formerly Cystic Adenomatoid Malformation (CCAM), is the most common congenital lung lesion, often detected antenatally. oka
Tracheobronchial Tree Troubles - Windpipe Woes
- Tracheoesophageal Fistula (TEF)
- Abnormal trachea-esophagus connection.
- Most common: Type C (Gross classification) - Esophageal atresia + distal TEF (~85%).
- 📌 VACTERL association: Vertebral, Anal, Cardiac, TEF, Renal, Limb defects.
- Bronchial Atresia
- Congenital focal obliteration of a segmental/lobar bronchus.
- Leads to mucocele ("finger-in-glove" sign) & distal hyperinflation via collateral air drift.

- Tracheomalacia / Bronchomalacia
- Excessive dynamic expiratory collapse of trachea/bronchi (>50% reduction in AP diameter).
- Diagnosis: Dynamic expiratory CT or bronchoscopy.
- Bronchogenic Cysts
- Congenital foregut duplication cyst; typically mediastinal (subcarinal, paratracheal commonest).
- Imaging: CT shows well-defined, spherical, fluid density; MRI reveals high T2 signal.
- ⭐ > Bronchogenic cysts are the most common primary mediastinal cysts.
Lung Parenchyma Puzzles - Spongy Surprises
- Pulmonary Agenesis/Aplasia/Hypoplasia:
- Agenesis: Total absence (lung, bronchus, vessels).
- Aplasia: Rudimentary bronchus, no parenchyma.
- Hypoplasia: ↓ lung volume, bronchi, alveoli.
- CXR: Opacified hemithorax, ipsilateral mediastinal shift.
- Congenital Lobar Emphysema (CLE):
- Cause: Ball-valve obstruction → air trapping, progressive hyperinflation.
- Imaging: Hyperlucent lobe, contralateral mediastinal shift, compressed adjacent lung.
- 📌 Most common: LUL, RML.

- Congenital Pulmonary Airway Malformation (CPAM): (fka CCAM)
- Types 0-4 (Stocker). Type 1: Most common (~70%), large cysts (>2 cm).
- Imaging: Cystic/solid lung mass; air-fluid levels.
- Risk: Malignancy (pleuropulmonary blastoma).
- Bronchopulmonary Sequestration (BPS):
- Non-functional lung; no normal bronchial connection. Systemic arterial supply.
- Intralobar (ILS): ~85%. No own pleura. Drains to pulmonary veins.
- Extralobar (ELS): ~15%. Own pleura. Drains to systemic veins. Associated anomalies.
⭐ BPS hallmark: Aberrant systemic arterial supply (aorta/branches), best seen on CT Angiography.
Vascular & Diaphragmatic Defects - Plumbing & Partition Problems
- Scimitar Syndrome (Hypogenetic Lung Syndrome)
- Complex: right lung hypoplasia, dextrocardia, systemic arterial supply to lung.
- Partial Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return (PAPVR): anomalous vein (curved "scimitar" shape) drains to IVC.
- CXR/CT: characteristic "Scimitar sign".

- Pulmonary Arteriovenous Malformations (PAVMs)
- Abnormal direct pulmonary artery-to-vein communication, bypassing capillaries; creates R-L shunt.
⭐ Strong association (~70%) with Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia (HHT/Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome).
- Clinical: dyspnea, hypoxemia, hemoptysis. Risks: paradoxical emboli (stroke, brain abscess).
- Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia (CDH)
- Diaphragmatic defect allowing abdominal viscera herniation into thorax.
- Bochdalek Hernia: posterolateral (📌 Back & Left; ~90% cases, usually left-sided).
- Morgagni Hernia: anteromedial, retrosternal, parasternal (rarer, often right-sided).
- Major morbidity: pulmonary hypoplasia and persistent pulmonary hypertension.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Bochdalek hernia: Most common CDH, left posterolateral, bowel in chest.
- CPAM (CCAM): Multicystic lung masses; Type 1 (large cysts) most common.
- Pulmonary sequestration: Non-functional lung with systemic arterial supply (aorta).
- Bronchogenic cysts: Mediastinal fluid-filled cysts from abnormal foregut budding.
- CLE: Lobar hyperinflation causing mediastinal shift; often upper/middle lobes.
- Scimitar syndrome: Anomalous right pulmonary venous return to IVC, hypoplastic right lung.
- Azygos lobe: Azygos vein within an accessory fissure in the right upper lobe.
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