Pneumonia Flashcards
CURB65 criteria
C Confusion
U Urea >7
R Respiration rate >= 30/min
B Blood pressure: systolic <= 90 mmHg and/or diastolic <= 60 mmHg
65 Aged >= 65 years
Risk stratification based on CURB65 score
score 1-2 = intermediate risk (consider admission)
Score 3-4 = high risk (admission needed)
What do NICE recommend with regards to antibiotics based on a point-of-care CRP test?
CRP < 20 - do not routinely offer antibiotic therapy
CRP 20 - 100 - consider a delayed antibiotic prescription
CRP > 100 - offer antibiotic therapy
Investigations used to diagnose pneumonia
CXR
Bloods and CRP
blood cultures
sputum cultures
pneumococcal and legionella urinary antigen tests
Antibiotic management of low severity CAP
1st Line: Amoxicillin
Penicillin allergic: Doxycycline or Clarithromycin
5 day course
Antibiotic management of high severity CAP
1st line: Amoxicillin + CLarithromycin
7-10 day course is recommended
*can also use Co-amoxiclav/ceftriaxone/Tazocin and Clarithromycin
What features in the past 24 hours would prehibit a patient from being discharged with CAP
Fever
RR>24
HR >100 beats per minute
systolic BP <90 mmHg
O2 sats <90% on room air
remains confused
Following admission with CAP, when should the fever have resolved?
1 week later
Following admission for CAP, when should Chest pain and sputum production have substantially reduced?
4 weeks
Cough and breathlessness should have substantially reduced by how many weeks following CAP?
6 weeks
3 months following admission for CAP, what symptom may continue to linger?
Fatigue
6 months following CAP, patients should feel back to normal. TRUE/FALSE
TRUE
Why must patients with pneumonia have a follow-up CXR at 6 weeks?
to ensure that the consolidation has resolved and there is no underlying malignancy