Pneumonia Flashcards
Presentation of pneumonia
- Cough (typically wet and productive)
- High fever (> 38.5ºC)
- Tachypnoea
- Tachycardia
- Increased work of breathing
- Lethargy
- Delirium (acute confusion associated with infection)
Signs of penumonua
- Tachypnoea (raised respiratory rate)
- Tachycardia (raised heart rate)
- Hypoxia (low oxygen)
- Hypotension (shock)
- Fever
- Confusion
Characteristic chest signs of pneumonia
Bronchial breath sounds
Focal course crackles
Dullness to percussion
What are the characteristic breath sounds in pneumonia caused by?
- Bronchial breath sounds. These are harsh breath sounds that are equally loud on inspiration and expiration. These are caused by consolidation of the lung tissue around the airway.
- Focal coarse crackles caused by air passing through sputum similar to using a straw to blow into a drink.
- Dullness to percussion due to lung tissue collapse and/or consolidation.
Causes bacterial oneumonia
- Streptococcus pneumonia is most common
- Group A strep (e.g. Streptococcus pyogenes)
- Group B strep
- Staphylococcus aureus.
- Haemophilus influenza
- Mycoplasma pneumonia
S aureus pneumonia on X ray
This causes typical chest xray findings of pneumatocoeles (round air filled cavities) and consolidations in multiple lobes.
Which bacteria look out for in unvaccinated children?
H.influenzae
What bacteria is atypical and causes extrapulmonary symptoms in pneumonina?
legionella and mycoplasma pneumoniae
Viral causes of pneumonia
RSV
parainfluenza
Influenza
What is pneumonia
Pneumonia is simply an infection of the lung tissue. It causes inflammation of the lung tissue and sputum filling the airways and alveoli. Pneumonia can be seen as consolidation on a chest xray. It can be caused by a bacteria, virus or atypical bacteria such as mycoplasma.
Child vs adults investigations pneumonian
Children rarely do X ray due to exposure, more clinical judgement, throat swabs, virla PCR and sputum cultures, cap blood gas analysis, blood lactactee
First line antibiotics for pneumonia
Amoxicillin
What antibiotics cover atypical pneumonias
Macrolide - erythromycin, clarithro/azithromyscin (monotherapy if penicillin allergy)
What assess for if recurrent pneumonias
reflux, aspiration, neurological disease, heart disease, asthma, cystic fibrosis, primary ciliary dyskinesia and immune deficiency.
Investigations for recurrent pneumonias
FBC
CXR - structural, scarring
Serous immunoglobulins
IgG to prev vaccines - pneumoccoscu, haemophilus
Sweat test - CF
HIV test