Pneumonias Flashcards
summarize the differences between lobar pneumonia and bronchopneumonia
describe the phase seen in the image
describe the phase seen in the image
describe the phase seen in the image
describe resolution (as seen in lobar pneumonia)
____ is the most common organism involved in community-acquired acute pneumonia
S.pneumoniae is the most common organism involved in community-acquired acute pneumonia
which patients are most susceptible to S. pneumoniae infection?
- underlying chronic disease: CHF, COPD, DM
- underlying congenital or acquired immunoglobulin deficiency
- decreased splenic fxn
describe community-acquired atypical pneumonia
- atypical = moderate or no sputum, absence of signs of consolidation, moderate leukocytosis, lack of alveolar exudates
- acute febrile illness
- patchy or whole lungs
- largely confined to the alveolar septal walls (intersititum)
___ is the most common organism involved in community-acquired atypical pneumonia
name other organisms
Mycoplasma pneumoniae (intracellular) is the most common organism involved in community-acquired atypical pneumonia
- Chlamydia pneumoniae (intracellular), Chlamydia psittaci (intracellular), Coxiella burnetti (intracellular), Francisella tularensis
- viral = influenza types A and B, RSV, human metapneumovirus, adenovirus, rhinovirus, rubeola, VCV
describe clinical signs of Mycoplasma pneumoniae
- usually occurs in younger age groups
- fever, nonprodctive cough, dyspnea
- rashes (trunk, extremities)
- hematologic effects are common
- anemia (hemolytic)
- cold agglutinins
- reticular opacities on CXR
describe patients that are susceptible to hospital-acquired pneumonia
- common in:
- patients with underlying lung disease
- the immunocompromised
- patients with prolonged antibiotic regimens
- catheters, ventilators
which organisms commonly cause hospital-acquired pneumonia?
- G-ve organisms
- Klebsiella, E. coli, Pseudomonas
describe lung abscesses
- cavity in the lung secondary to suppurative destruction of lung parenchyma
- mechanism
- aspiration
- complication of necrotizing bacterial pneumonia
- obstruction
- secondary infection of TB cavity
- septic emboli
- hematogenous spread of bacteria
- more common on the right side
- rupture can lead to empyema
describe clinical signs of a lung abscess
- clinical:
- cough with copious, foul sputum
- hemoptysis
- spiking fever
- malaise
- clubbing of fingers
- weight loss
- anemia
describe complications of a lung abscess
- complications:
- bronchopleural fistula
- empyema, septicemia → meningitis, brain abscess
- amyloidosis