Figure 1
From: Diagnosis and management of drug-associated interstitial lung disease

High-resolution CT images demonstrating radiology of drug-associated ILD. (A) A 77-year-old man with diffuse alveolar damage secondary to amidarone; note the extensive bilateral ground-glass opacities, airspace consolidation and bilateral pleural effusions. (B) A 36-year-old woman with hypersensitivity pneumonitis secondary to sertraline; note the extensive bilateral ground-glass opacities and lobular areas of air trapping (arrows). (C) A 69-year-old man with BOOP-like reaction to amiodarone; note the mild reticulation and bilateral areas of consolidation and ground-glass opacities in a predominantly peribronchial distribution. (D) A 47-year-old man with NSIP reaction to bleomycin; note the extensive bilateral ground-glass opacities with mild superimposed reticulation. (E) A 47-year-old man with eosinophilic pneumonia reaction to dilantin; note the patchy bilateral areas of consolidation involving the peripheral regions of the upper lobes.