- What is it:
The arcade-like sign in the lungs refers to the appearance of curvilinear or arched opacities in the peripheral lung parenchyma, forming a loop or “arcade” pattern. It represents perilobular fibrosis, often seen in organizing pneumonia or other fibrotic lung diseases. - Etymology:
Derived from “arcade,” meaning a series of arches, describing the curved arrangement of linear opacities. - AKA:
Perilobular pattern.
How does it appear on each relevant imaging modality?
- Chest X-ray (CXR):
- May not be clearly visible.
- Peripheral opacities can suggest the presence of organizing pneumonia but lack the detail for the arcade-like pattern.
- CT (Chest CT):
- Parts: Curvilinear opacities outlining the secondary pulmonary lobules.
- Size: Corresponds to the boundaries of the secondary pulmonary lobule.
- Shape: Arched or curvilinear.
- Position: Peripheral lung zones; may involve multiple lobes.
- Character: Ground-glass or consolidative density, often with a perilobular distribution.
- Time: Can evolve over weeks to months, either resolving or progressing to fibrosis.
- Differential Diagnosis:
- Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (COP)
- Chronic eosinophilic pneumonia
- Fibrotic hypersensitivity pneumonitis
- Idiopathic interstitial pneumonias (e.g., NSIP)
- Resolving pulmonary edema
- Pulmonary hemorrhage (perilobular distribution)
- Recommendations:
- Correlate with clinical and laboratory findings (e.g., autoimmune panels, eosinophil count).
- Consider biopsy if the diagnosis remains uncertain and imaging findings are atypical.
- Follow up with serial imaging to assess response to treatment.
Key Points and Pearls:
- Commonly associated with cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (COP).
- The arcade-like sign is often seen in cases with ill-defined linear opacities representing fibrosis along perilobular connective tissues.
- Contrast with honeycombing, which represents end-stage fibrosis with clustered cystic spaces.
- Timely recognition can guide treatment, often involving corticosteroids for organizing pneumonia.
Feature | Subpleural Band | Arcade-like Sign | Linear Atelectasis |
Definition | Linear opacity parallel to the pleura | Curvilinear opacity outlining lobules | Thin linear opacity, gravity-dependent |
Cause | Chronic fibrosis | Organizing pneumonia | Dependent lung collapse |
Histopathology | Dense fibrosis in intralobular interstitium | Fibroblast proliferation in perilobular tissue | Compressed but reversible alveoli |
HRCT | Persistent thin lines; honeycombing may occur | Perilobular curvilinear opacities; reversible | Thin lines resolving with position change |
CXR | Subtle linear opacity in peripheral lung | Patchy consolidation or curvilinear lines | Faint linear opacity in dependent lung regions |
Reversibility | Irreversible | Partially reversible with treatment | Reversible with positional changes |