Lung Infections - Pneumonia Flashcards
1
Q
Definition of pneumonia
A
- infective inflammation & consolidation of the lung
- filling of airspaces by inflammatory exudate - renders affected area solid & airless
- is a kind of pneumonitis = inflammatory disease dominated by interstitial inflammation (causes apart from infection include inhaled toxins & allergens, drug reactions, irradiation, connective tissue disease)
2
Q
Classification of pneumonia
A
- Pathological - how infection spreads
- bronchopneumonia
- lobar pneumonia - Microbiological - causative organism
- Clinical
- CAP, HAP, special envts, disease in immunosuppressed patients, aspiration
3
Q
Features of bronchopneumonia
A
- primary infection centred on bronchi, spreads to involve adjacent alveoli
- infants, elderly, common terminal event in debilitated patients
- affects lower lobes more, secretions drain to the bottom, cannot be coughed out
4
Q
Complications of bronchopneumonia (3)
A
- Lung abscess
- Pleural infection
- Septicaemia
5
Q
Morphology of bronchopneumonia
A
- G: patchy areas of consolidation, may become confluent
- M: acute inflammatory infiltration of bronchioles & adjacent alveoli
6
Q
Features of lobar pneumonia
A
- organisms gain entry to distal airspaces rather than colonising bronchi
- rapid spread through alveolar spaces & bronchioles - without following airways
- usually very virulent - Strep pneumonia, Klebsiella
- often causes severe illness + bacteremia
- prompt treatment can lead to complete resolution (little tissue destruction)
7
Q
Morphology of lobar pneumonia
A
- G: consolidation of whole/part of a lobe, liver-like consistency - hepatization (firm, airless)
M:
- alveoli of affected lobe diffusely infiltrated by acute inflammatory exudate (neutrophils, fibrin)
- red hepatization: massive confluent exudation with neutrophils, red cells, fibrin filling alveolar spaces
- grey hepatization: progressive disintegration of red cells & persistence of the original fibrinosuppurative exudate
8
Q
Features of community acquired pneumonia
A
- usually gram positive bacteria - commonly Strep pneumoniae
- also H. influenzae, Legionella, Mycoplasma, M. tuberculosis, viral
9
Q
Features of hospital acquired pneumonia
A
- mainly due to gram neg bacteria eg Klebsiella, E coli, Pseudomonas
- pts on mechanical ventilation are at risk
- investigation of sputum is often a problem due to colonisation - may req direct sampling of affected lung (BAL)
10
Q
Effects/complications of pneumonia (4)
A
- Pleurisy
- Lung abscess
- Septicaemia
- Lung fibrosis
11
Q
Features of aspiration pneumonia
A
- unconsciousness, impaired swallowing
- mixed organisms (often anaerobes, oropharyngeal bacteria) +/- gastric acid +/- food = infective pneumonia + chemical damage
- freq leads to lung abscesses, leaves cavities
12
Q
Features of atypical pneumonia
A
- minimal airspace exudate (no consolidation on CXR)
- marked infiltration of alveolar septa/interstitium by chronic inflammatory cells
- interstitial pattern pneumonia, not fought by neutrophils but lymphocytes