Lecture 20: Lower resp. tract infection; Pneumonia Flashcards

1
Q

What is the most common serious bacterial infection?

A

Pneumonia

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2
Q

Pneumonia is hard to distinguish from RSV, rhinovirus, covid etc withoverlapping symptoms. So what is the greatest indicator of pneumonia?

A

Fever + Cough.

Distinguishes bronchitis form pneumonia

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3
Q

What symptoms are seen in pneumonia of the elderly?

A
Increased RR
Crackles
Consolidation
Fevers/chills
Non-pulmonary i.e dilirium or falls or lack of appetite
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4
Q

What might indicate consolidation on CXR?

A

Lower lobes sitting on diaphragm when they full with pus the diaphragm cant be distinguished

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5
Q

What are the risk factors for pneumonia?

A
  • <2yrs or >65yrs
  • Chronic lung disease (interferes with innate immune system)
  • Smoking
  • Immune dysfunction
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6
Q

What are the innate immune properties of the resp. tract?

A
Ciliated epithelium
Nasal turbinates
Nasal secretions
Saliva
Epiglottis
Goblet cells
Airway liquid
PAMS
Alveolar fluid
Neutrophils
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7
Q

What are the two top agents causing pneumonia?

A
  1. S. pneumoniae
  2. Heamophilus influenza

BUT depends on study…

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8
Q

How prevelent is streptococcus pneumoniae?

A

alpha heamolytic streptococcus viridans group.

Transiently colonizes lung when aspirated can cause pneumonia

5-10% adults, 20-40% of children.
- Prevalence of colonization increases in winter in adults, persists for few weeks

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9
Q

What gives pneumococcal virulence?

A

Pneumococcal surface protein A (PSPA): Binds to epithelial cells and also prevent deposition of C3b

PSPC: Prevents activation of complement cascade

Pili: Contribute to colonization and cytokine production (TNFa) during invasion

Polysaccharide capsule: Prevents phagocytosis and complement deposition

Pneumolysin: (toxin) lyses neutrophils and epithelial cells

Choline binding protein: Binds to Ig receptor on epithelial cells - allows transport into cell

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10
Q

What are the investigations for a suspected pneumonia?

A
  • CXR is primary investigation
  • Sputum culture (often contaminated)
  • Nasopharyngeal swab (Viral PCR)
  • Blood cultures
  • Urine ICT(proteins shedded from blood into urine, but low conc. therefore low sensitivity)
  • Serology
  • CT chest/ bronchoscopy
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11
Q

Whats the role of antibiotics and pneumonia?

A
  • Antibiotics required, reduces duration of illness and risk of death
  • Beware of penicillin resistance
  • Oral vs IV dosing (esp. if meningitis develop)
  • Penicillin resistance associated with resistance to others.
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12
Q

What can we target in bacteria that are distinguished from humans?

A

Bacterial ribosomes, are sufficiently diff to human, so they can be targeted

i. e
- 50S transpeptidation (Macrolides)
- 50S peptidyl transferase
- 30S initiation (Aminoglycosides)
- 30S tRNA binding (Tetracyclines)

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13
Q

How do macrolides function?

A
  • Broad spectrum
  • Limited activity against gram negative
  • Active against streptococci, staphylococci and other cause of pneumonia
  • Treatment of chlamydia
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14
Q

Whats the adverse effects of macrolide antimicrobials?

A
  • GI tract upset
  • Sudden death (Long QT)
  • Drug-drug interactions
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15
Q

Whats the empiric treatment of pneumonia?

A

Based on severity and setting generally 5 days of treatment required

  • Mild -> Severe
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16
Q

What causes bronchitis?

A

It is a viral illness

Adenovirus and influenza is most common

17
Q

Do antibiotics help with bronchitis?

A
  • Randomised placebo-controlled trails have NOT demonstrated a benefit

Treatment for cough: NSAIDs, Sedating antihistamines