16 - LRTIs and Pneumonia Flashcards
What is pneumonia and pneumonitis?
Pneumonia: Inflammation of the lung parenchyma due to infection.
Pneumonitis: inflammation of the lung without infection, e.g due to physical or chemical damage
What is the common feature of all pneumonias and what would localised and diffuse pneumonia be called?
- Cellular exudate in alveolar spaces
- Lobar pneumonia (localised to one lobe)
- Bronchopneumonia (patchier)
What are some of the different organisms that can cause pneumonia?
- Bacterial
- Atypical
- Viral
- Fungal
- Protozoal
What are the pathological changes in pneumonia?
- Fibrin rich exudate
- Neutrophil infiltration
- Macrophage infiltration
What are some examples of classifications of pneumonia?
- Community-acquired
- Hospital acquired
- Aspiration
- Atypical (immunocompromised patient)
What are some of the organisms that cause typical community acquired pneumonia?
- Strep Pneumoniae (most common)
- H.Influenzae
- Moraxella Catarrhalis
- Klebsiella Pneumoniae
- Staph Aureus
What are some of the atypical organisms that can cause community acquired pneumonia?
- Mycoplasma Pneumoniae (most common)
- Chlamydia Pneumoniae
- Legionella Pneumophila
What is the definition of nosocomial pneumonia and what are the most common organisms causing this infection?
Infection of the lower respiratory tract in hospitalised patients occuring 48 hours after admission and was not incubating at the time of admission
Gram negative bacteria, MRSA, Staph aureus
What is aspiration pneumonia and what are the causative organisms?
- Aspiration of food, drink, saliva or vomit usually due to reduced level of consciousness, e.g anaesthesia, alcohol or drug abuse, neuromuscular disease, leading to infection
- Oral flora and anaerobes
What are the most common organisms to cause pneumonia in an immunocompromised patient?
- Pneumocystis jiroveci
- Aspergillus species
- Cytomegalovirus
What are some of the presentations of pneumonia?
- Dyspnoea
- Malaise
- Fever
- Productive cough
- Sputum will be purulent, rusty or flank blood
- Pleuritic chest pain
What would be abnormal on a respiratory exam with pneumonia?
What organisms most commonly case rapid onset pneumonia, often fatal if not treated quickly?
- Pneumococcal
- Staphylococcal
Atypical organisms like mycoplasma pneumonia usually are over a long period with symptoms for weeks
What tool can be used to assess the severity of pneumonia?
- Over 2 need hopsital treatment
- 2-5 then severe and consider ICU
Without doing a sputum sample, how can you make a guess at what organism is causing a patient’s pneumonia?
- Community or hospital acquired?
- Presence of chronic lung disease?
- Immunosuppression?
- Ownership of pet or travelled?