Chapter 4 Flashcards
What are the 3 normal defences of the lung?
- Large microbes trapped in nose and upper respiratory tract by mucus. Transported by ciliary action of respiratory epithelium to back of throat, where swallowed.
- Cough Reflex
- Smaller organisms which are inhaled get phagocytosed by alveolar macrophages and if enter bloodstream, incite immune response
Upper respiratory tract infection is caused by what usually?
Self limiting viral disease
Which is more serious - lower or upper respiratory tract infection
Lower
What increases risk of infection?
- Damage to host defences due to smoking, intubation, previous infection
- Poor swallowing
- Reduced cough reflex
What is pneumonia?
Infective inflammation and consolidation of the lung (filling of airspaces by inflammatory exudate which renders affected area solid and airless)
What are 3 symptoms of pneumonia?
- Fever
- Coughing
- Difficulty Breathing
What are three broad categories that pneumonia may be classified into?
- Pathological
- Microbiological
- Clinical
How is pneumonia classified via the pathological classification?
Air Space Spread (Typically bacterial)
- Bronchopneumonia
- Lobar Pneumonia
Interstitial Spread (Typically Viral)
- Interstitial Pneumonia
How is pneumonia classified via the clinical classification?
Community-Acquired
Hospital-Acquired
Disease Acquired in Special Environments
Disease in Immunosuppressed Patients
Aspiration Pneumonia
How is pneumonia classified via the microbiological classification?
By causative organism
What is pneumonitis?
Inflammatory disease dominated by interstitial inflammation
What causes pneumonitis?
- Infection
- Inhaled Toxins and Allergens
- Drug Reactions
- Irradiation
- Connective Tissue Disease
What is the appearance of bronchopneumonia?
- Primary infection centred on bronchi, spreading to involve adjacent alveoli
- Initially patchy, may become confluent
When is bronchopneumonia common?
Infancy and old age
Which part of the lung does bronchopneumonia affect more?
Lower Lobes