Pneumonia Flashcards
Define pneumonia
signs and symptoms of LRTI with evidence of radiological infiltration (consolidation on X-Ray)
What are the different types of pneumonia?
- Community acquired – acquired outside hospital/healthcare facilities
- Hospital-acquired/nosocomial – acquired >48h after admission to hospital
- Aspiration – results from inhalation of oropharyngeal contents
- Atypical – caused by organisms not detectable on Gram stain or cultured using standard methods
What are the causes/ risk factors of the different types of pneumonia?
Community acquired causes: • Streptococcus pneumoniae (70%) • Haemophilus influenza • Moraxella catarrhalis (COPD) • Staphylococcus aureus (influenza) • Coxiella burnetti (Q fever) • Atypical pneumonia risk factors: • Age >65 years • Smoking • Alcohol abuse • COPD
Hospital-acquired/ nosocomial causes: • MRSA • Pseudomonas aeruginosa • Klebsiella pneumoniae • Acinetobacter spp. risk factors: • Poor infection control/ hand hygiene • Intubation
Aspiration causes: • Anaerobes risk factors: • Altered mental status • Swallowing dysfunction e.g. stroke • GORD, hiatus hernia • Intubation/ tracheostomy • NG tube
Atypical causes: • Mycoplasma pneumoniae • Chlamydia pneumoniae • Legionella pneumophila risk factors: • Close communities • Immunosuppression • Air conditioning • Stagnant water • Travel
What are the symptoms of pneumonia?
- Fever
- Rigors
- Sweating
- Malaise
- Cough
- Sputum (rusty red in pneumococcal infection)
- SOB
- Pleuritic chest pain
- Confusion (severe, elderly)
- high BP, low HR
Aspiration
• Frothy/purulent sputum
• Foul-smelling breath
Atypical • Headache • Myalgia • Pharyngitis • Hoarseness • Diarrhoea/abdominal pain (Legionella) • Confusion (Legionella)
What are the signs of pneumonia?
- Pyrexia
- Respiratory distress
- Tachypnoea
- Tachycardia
- Hypotension
- Cyanosis
- Reduced chest expansion
- Dullness to percussion
- Increased tactile/vocal fremitus
- Whispering pectoriloquy
- Bronchial breathing
- Coarse crepitations
What are the investigations for pneumonia?
• Bloods
o FBC – raised WCC
o U&Es – low Na in Legionella
o LFTs – deranged in Mycoplasma, Legionella
• Blood culture
• Blood film – RBC agglutination in Mycoplasma (cold agglutinin)
• ABG
• Sputum MC&S – acid fast bacilli
• Urine – pneumococcal and Legionella antigens
• CXR – lobar or patchy consolidation, pleural effusion, abscess, cavitations
• Bronchoscopy and lavage
What is the management of pneumonia?
CURB-65 score
• Start empirical antibiotics
o 5 days oral amoxicillin (or macrolide)
o 7-10 days oral or IV amoxicillin and macrolide
o 7-10 days IV co-amoxiclav/cefotaxime/cefuroxime
and macrolide
o + metronidazole if aspiration (anaerobes)
• Oxygen
• IV fluids – dehydration, shock
• Analgesia
• CPAP or BiPAP and ITU for respiratory failure
• Surgical drainage of empyema/abscess
What are the complications of pneumonia?
- Pleural effusion
- Empyema
- Abscess
- Septic shock
- ARDS
- Acute renal failure
Mycoplasma pneumoniae • Erythema multiforme • Myocarditis • Haemolytic anaemia • Meningoencephalitis • Transverse myelitis • Guillain-Barré syndrome