Infective lung disease Flashcards
1
Q
Infective lung diseases include:
A
- UPPER (URTI) AND MIDDLE RESPIRITORY INFECTIONS (most common) • Rhinorrhoea (runny nose)
- Croup, Epiglottitis, Bronchiolitis
- Lower Respiratory Tract Infections (LRTI) • PNEUMONIA
- PULMONARYTUBERCULOSIS • FUNGALDISEASE
- LUNGABCESS
2
Q
Pneumonia clinical presentation
A
- Fever and/or chills
- Cough (with or without sputum production)
- Tachypnoea and/or dyspnoea
- Tachycardia or bradycardia
- Wheezing (whistling noise)
- Rhonchi (coarse rattling sound)
- Rales (fine crackles)
- Sternal or intercostal retractions • Dullness to percussion
- Decreased breath sounds
- Pleurisy
- Cyanosis
- Rash
- Acute respiratory distress
3
Q
Pneumonia patholgenesis
A
Inhalation
Aspiration
Haematogenous
4
Q
What is Pneumonia
A
• Classified by infecting organism • Organism dictates treatment • Acute lung infection; cause: – Bacteria – Viruses – Fungi – Parasites • Inflammation within & around alveolar tissues (consolidation) • Common aetiologic agents: – Streptococcus pneumoniae (b) – Mycoplasma pneumoniae (b) – Haemophilus influenzae (b) – Staphylococcus aureus (b) – Influenza A & B (v) • Pneumonitis = inflammation of lung parenchyma caused by a chemical or radiation therapy
5
Q
Clinical diagnosis for pneumonia
A
- Suggestive signs & symptoms
- Microbiologic testing (Blood / Sputum) • CXR or other imaging techniques
- Bronchoscopy
6
Q
Pneumonia CXR
A
- Most common cause of solitary airspace filling
- Opacity almost any shape
- Cavitation & pleural effusion are distinct features
- Widely used
- Patterns of pneumonia on CXR typically poor predictor
- Diagnosis compounded by preexisting lung disease e.g. emphysema
- Role of CXR
- Establish presence of pneumonia
- Determine location
- Determine extent
- May identify predisposing conditions e.g. bronchial carcinoma
- Identify associated complications e.g. pleural effusion
- Satisfactory to follow response to treatment
- Role for CT in more complex or slow resolving cases
7
Q
Radiographic patterns of infective pneumonia
A
- Basic pattern is that of consolidation
- Pneumonias traditionally divided (classified) according to radiographic appearances (patterns of distribution):
- Lobar pneumonia
- Bronchopneumonia (segmental)
- Interstitial pneumonia
- Spherical pneumonia (round or nodular)
- Cavitary
- Limited differential diagnosis value
- Same organisms can produce several patterns
- Pattern partly dependent upon integrity of host’s defenses
- Patterns overlap in individual patients
8
Q
Treatment for pneumonia
A
- Treatment is based on the infecting organism • Bacterial infections treated with antibiotics
- Match the organism being treated
- Usually treated orally
- Administered IV if case is severe
- Viral infections can’t be treated with antibiotics
- Fluids and rest also advised
- Physiotherapy treatment useful in persistent cases
9
Q
Infective lung disease CT
A
- To suggest causative pathogens
- Exclude non-infectious pneumonia
- Reveal underlying diseases
- Suspicious round opacification
- Severe or complex pneumonia
- Pneumonia in immunocompromised patients • Pneumonia intractable to antibiotics
- Recurrent/non-resolving pneumonia
10
Q
Infective lung disease NM
A
- FDG PET/CT and 99mTc-HMPAO-leukocyte scintigraphy for characterizing inflammatory, infectious disease & malignancy
- FDG-PET low specificity but huge potential when combined with other imaging
- Increasing clinical use for TB and HIV associated infections
- Not routine in Australia
11
Q
TB Treatment
A
- Course of oral medication
- Cocktail of 4 different drugs
- Taken over a period of at least 6 months
- These drugs can produce side effects • Nausea or vomiting
- Jaundice
- Unexplained fever or tiredness
- Tingling or numbness of hands or feet • Joint pains
- Skin rash, itching skin or bruising
- Visual changes
12
Q
Other imaging uses
A
- NM – VQ scans show defects with pneumonia • MRI – Ventilation study
- US – Guided pleural drainage / aspiration.
13
Q
Pulmonary tuberculosis
A
Primary infection: • Located anywhere in lung • Large or small • Cavitation is uncommon • Possiblelymphnodeenlargement • Possible pleural effusions
Post Primary:
• Commonly located in upper lobe
• Large lesion with potential smaller ones
• Cavitation is more common
• Possible enlargement of hilar lymph nodes
Predisposing factors include: • Contact with TB • Elderly • Infants • Smokers • Environment/socioeconomic
Symptoms:
• Asymptomatic
Differential: • Pneumonia • Lung cancer • Non-tuberculous mycobacteria • Sarcoidosis