Typical Pneumonia Flashcards

1
Q

Compare the features of “typical” and “atypical” pneumonias.

A
  • Typical: high fever, shaking chills, chest pain
    • lobar consolidation on X-ray
  • Atypical: less severe illness (“walking pneumonia”)
    • Dry cough, headache, and other systemic complains,
    • X-ray -diffuse pattern, looks worse than illness suggests.
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2
Q

Cite the major causes of acute, community-acquired “typical” pneumonia and acute “hospital acquired” pneumonia.

A
Typical: 
-Streptococcus pneumoniae (most common cause of acute community acquired pneumonia or CAP)
-Staphylococcus aureus-CAP
-Haemophilus influenzae-CAP
-Gram-negative enterics (hospital acquired) 
Atypical: 
-Mycoplasma pneumoniae
-Chlamydia pneumoniae, psittaci
-Legionella pneumophila
-Influenza and other viruses
-Coxiella burnetti
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3
Q

microbiological characteristics of Streptococcus pneumoniae.
How is the organism is identified in the laboratory?

A

Morphology/growth:

  • alpha hemolytic (not true lysis; rather, green color is due to due to breakdown of hemoglobin by pneumolysin)
  • Colonies are mucoid due to capsule
  • Gram positive lancet shaped cocci
  • Catalase negative
  • best growth on media with 5-10% blood;
  • autolytic enzymes cause lysis of colony in bile salts (“bile solubility”)
  • susceptibility to optochin
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4
Q

Name the major virulence determinant of Streptococcus pneumoniae

A

Capsular Polysaccharides:
-Capsule interferes with the deposition of C3b on the bacterial surface
-Therefore, no recognition of C3b-coated organisms by the complement receptors on phagocytes
~90 serotypes;
-anti-capsular antibody provides type-specific immunity
-Loss of capsule=loss of virulence
Surface proteins:
-prevent the activation of complement
Pili:
-Enable S. pneumoniae to attach to epithelial cells in the upper respiratory tract

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5
Q

Streptococcus pneumoniae Clinical manifestations

A

-sudden onset of chills
-fever
-pleuritic pain
-rusty sputum/positive blood cultures in 30% of cases.
Possible complications:
-Direct – lung abscess
-Via blood:
-empyema
-pericarditis
-meningitis
-intrapleural abscess
-septic arthritis

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6
Q

Therapy for S. pneumonia ND Pneumococccal Infections

A
  • Many isolates of S. pneumoniae are now penicillin resistant.
  • Guidelines for empiric treatment change over time.
  • Different regimens are recommended for different types of pneumococcal infections.
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7
Q

Composition of the two major types of pneumococcal vaccines and the intended recipients of each.

A

-Conjugate Vaccine (PCV13)
-PCV13 was approved for use among children aged 6 weeks–71 months and succeeds PCV7, which was licensed by FDA in 2000
-Older vaccine: polysaccharide only vaccine (23 PS)
-Contains capsular polysaccharide from each of 23 serotypes.
-Currently recommended for everyone at 65
≥19 years immunocompromising conditions, functional or anatomic asplenia, CSF leaks, or cochlear implants
should receive a dose of PCV13 first, followed by a dose of PPSV23 at least 8 weeks later

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