Sarcoidosis Characteristics
- Inflammatory Response
- Small bead-like patches of inflamed/immune cells
- Can be a long-lasting disease
- Can affect other areas
Can affect almost any organ, but we will mainly be focusing on pulmonary sarcoidosis which accounts for 90% of those affected (Foundation for Sarcoidosis Research).
The bead-like patches, called granulomas, form in response to a stimulus. Usually appearing in the lungs, which accounts for interfering with respiration, and nearby lymph nodes. These clumps of inflamed cells can cause inflammation and interfere with organ function which results in symptoms (Foundation for Sarcoidosis Research).
Serious symptoms are not that common, but will most likely result in some form of a lifestyle change.
The most common areas which it can become present are the lungs and the surrounding lymph nodes, but it can also affect the skin, the eyes, and, although it often does not often require treatment, the liver.
Certain populations, especially African-Americans, are more prone to the activation of the disease outside the lungs. It affects other parts of the body, which is why the symptoms which we will discuss later on are so broad.
(Foundation for Sarcoidosis Research)