Pneumonia Flashcards
Risk factors for pneumonia
• impaired lung defenses
- poor cough/gag reflex (e.g. illness, drug-induced)
- impaired mucociliary transport (e.g. smoking, cystic fibrosis)
- immunosuppression (e.g. steroids, chemotherapy, AIDS/HIV, DM, transplant, cancer)
• increased risk of aspiration
- impaired swallowing mechanism (e.g. impaired consciousness, neurologic illness causing dysphagia, mechanical obstruction)
• no organism identified in 75% of hospitalized cases, and >90% of ambulatory cases
What are the 3 As of Klebsiella?
Aspiration pneumonia
Alcoholics and diabetics
Abscess in lungs
Px of pneumonia
- cough (± sputum), fever, pleuritic chest pain, dyspnea, tachypnea, tachycardia
- elderly often present atypically; altered LOC is sometimes the only sign
- evidence of consolidation (dullness to percussion, bronchial breath sounds, crackles, increased fremitus, whisper pectoriloquy)
- features of parapneumonic effusion (decreased air entry, dullness to percussion, decreased fremitus)
Cx of pneumonia
ARDS, lung abscess, parapneumonic effusion/empyema, pleuritis ± hemorrhage
Ix of pneumonia
• pulse oximetry to assess severeity of respiratory distress
• CBC and differential, electrolytes, urea, Cr, ABG (if respiratory distress), troponin/CK, LFTs, urinalysis
• sputum Gram stain/C&S, blood C&S, ± serology/viral detection, ± pleural fluid C&S (if effusion
>5 cm or respiratory distress)
• CXR±CT chest shows distribution (lobar consolidation or interstitial pattern), extent of
infiltrate ± cavitation
• bronchoscopy ± washings for
(1) severely ill patients refractory to treatment or (2) immunocompromised patients
Rx of pneumonia
- ABC, O2, IV fluids, consider salbutamol (nebulized or MDI)
* determine prognosis and need for hospitalization and antibiotics
What is the pneumonia clinical prediction tool?
CURB65 score
Confusion (altered mental status)
Urea/Bun: Urea >7mM, BUN >19
Resp rate >30
Blood pressure less than 90 systolic or less than 60 diastolic
Age >65yo
1 point for each
0-1: less than 5% mortality. Outpatient
2-3: 5-15% mortality. Hospitalisation
4-5: 15-30% mortality. ICU
How (3) can you prevent pneumonia?
- Influenza A & B vaccine annually for ALL ages
- Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (Pneumovax) for >65yo & >24mo at high risk for invasive pneumococcal disease (functional/anatomic asplenia, immunodeficiency)
- Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (Prevnar-13): all children less than 5yo, 5-17yo at high risk for invasive pneumococcal disease who have not previously received Prevnar-13. Also recommended for adults at high risk.