Pneumonia Flashcards

1
Q

Differentiate the two types of pneumonia and their pathologies

A

Community acquired pneumonia
Hospital acquired pneumonia

They are both caused by either bacterial or viral pathogens e.g strep pnuemoniae, gram negative enteric bacilli, E.coli, staph aureus, legionella spp
Viruses . - haemophilus influenzae (A and B), mycoplasmic pneumoniae,

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2
Q

How is community acquired pneumonia diagnosed in primary setting ?

A

Acute illness <21 days
cough
At least 1 symptom of lower resp tract infection e.g fever, sputum production, breathlessness, wheeze (OR chest pain, COPD exacerbation),
AND use of CRB65
confusion, respiratory rate, blood pressure (low), age 65 or over.
1 point per item, score of 3-4 high risk

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3
Q

How to assess confusion in CRB65?

A
Asking the patient a series of questions eg 
age 
DOB
Name of the hospital 
Identification of 2 persons e. gnurse and dr 
Recall address 
Year
Time 
Date of a significant event 
Name of the monarch
Count backwards from 20 to 1 
(A score of 8 or less suggests mental confusion)
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4
Q

How is CAP diagnosed in hospital?

A

Chest X ray confirms the diagnosis
CURB65 –> confusion, urea 7mmol/l or more, resp rate 30/min or more, BP <90 systolic and <60 diastolic , 65 or over

Also - oxygen sats, C-reactive protein, microbiological tests e.g sputum and blood, full blood counts, LFTs

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5
Q

Describe CURB65

A

Confusion
Urea - 7 mmol/L or more
Respiratory rate 30 breaths per min or more
Blood pressure LOW <90 mmhg systolic or <60 mmhg diastolic
age 65 or over

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6
Q

What is the treatment distinctions for the severities of CAP?

A

Treating low severity - use of 1 AB for 5 days - usually amoxicillin 1st line

Moderate severity and high - use of dual AB therapy for 7 -10 days

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7
Q

How to treat moderate severity CAP

A

Amoxicillin and macrolide e.g erythromycin or clarithromycin for 7-10 days

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8
Q

How to treat high severity CAP in hospital

A

Broad spectrum beta lactamase stable Beta lactam AB - e.g Co-amoxiclav, cefotaxime or cefuroxime AND erythromycin or clarithromycin - 7-10days

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9
Q

How do we monitor for efficicacy in CAP / monitor for discharge?

A
Improvement shown within 48-72hours. ONLY discharge if:
Temp is <37.5 degrees 
Heart rate is less than 100bpm 
Resp rate <24bpm 
Systolic BP is >90mmhg 
Oxygen sats are >90% 
Normal mental status 
Eat without assistance 
Do not discharge if patient didn't show <2 of these in the past 24hours.
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10
Q

How to optimise therapy in CAP?

A

When a patient has severe CAP it is common to use parenteral therapy - but we want to de-escalate this within a few days/reduction in severity ie as soon as appropriate for the patient - switching to oral therapy - also want to narrow the spectrum as soon as we identify the pathogen

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11
Q

Other treatments for CAP/symptomatic/non pharmacological?

A

Relieve pleuritic pain with paracetamol and nsaids
Relieve fever - usually para
Salbutamol
Fluids
Oxygen therapy but only if their PaO2 is <8 kPa or systolic is <100mmhg and resp rate >24 bpm

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12
Q

What is hospital acquired pneumonia?

A

Pneumonia that occurs 48 hours or more after hospital admission and is not incubating on admission, more commonly acquired on the ITU so common risk factors are:
stroke, chronic lung disease, recent surgery, mechanical infiltration, previous AB treatment

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13
Q

Treatment for HAP

A

EMPIRICAL treatment as soon as possible after diagnosis and within 4hours.
This is good as the mortality could be lower if the emiric treatment is effective.
However –> unnecessary use of extended spectrum ABs and inappropriate use of 1st line abs - could lead to resistance. Also empiric treatment usually needed to be changed in most cases anyway.

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14
Q

How to prevent HAP?

A

Hand hygeine, PPE, sterilisation and disinfection of equipment and instruments
Patient procedures

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