18.2 Pneumonia Flashcards

1
Q

What is pneumonia?

A

Inflammation of the lower respiratory tract in which the alveolar spaces are filled with fluid and inflammatory cells.

Chest infection is a general term, not all chest infections are pneumonia.

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2
Q

What are the signs of a chest infection?

A
  • Productive cough
  • Yellow or green sputum
  • Shortness of breath
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3
Q

What are the 3 classifications on pneumonia?

A
  • Community acquired pneumonia (CAP)
  • Hospital acquired pneumonia
  • Healthcare-acquired pneumonia: acquired from outpatient clinic, nursing home or long-term care facility
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4
Q

What is the community definition of pneumonia?

A
  • Symptoms of acute LRTI
  • New focal signs on chest examination
  • At least one systemic feature
  • No other explanation for illness
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5
Q

What is the hospital definition of pneumonia?

A
  • An infection of the lungs that occurs during a hospital stay, plus additional shadowing on chest X-ray
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6
Q

What are common pneumonia causing pathogens?

A
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Haemophilus influenzae
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • Pneumonia can be caused by bacteria, viruses and fungi
  • Pneumonia can also be non-infective, e.g. caused by a connective tissue condition such as lupus
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7
Q

Describe the pathophysiology of pneumonia.

A
  • Fluid and exudate fill the alveoli
  • In severe pneumonias, this causes hypoxia as gas exchange cannot take place
  • Lobular pneumonia: might only affect 1 lobe
  • Bronchopneumonia: inflammation of the terminating bronchioles
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8
Q

Describe the incidence of CAP.

A
  • 5-11 cases per 1000 adults
  • Diagnosed in 5-12% of adult patients who present to GP with symptoms of an LRTI
  • 22-42% of pts who present to GP with CAP are admitted to hospital
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9
Q

Describe the mortality rates for pneumonia.

A
  • <1% for those cases managed in the community
  • 6-14% for those admitted to hospital with CAP
  • > 30% for those admitted to an ICU
  • 60% of pneumonia deaths occur in pts aged over 84
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10
Q

What does the term nosocomial pneumonia refer to?

A

Healthcare/hospital associated pneumonia.

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11
Q

How do the types of pathogens causing pneumonia differ between types of pneumonia?

A
  • CAP = mostly gram positive bacteria
  • Late nosocomial = mostly gram negative
  • Immunocompressed = opportunistic pathogens
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12
Q

Is CAP only caused by bacteria?

A

No, can be caused by viruses.
E.g. Influenza A or B

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13
Q

What should be noted when taking a history from a suspected pneumonia patient?

A
  • Recent travel (Spain and Italy overprescribe abx, pt may be ill with a very resistant strain)
  • Pets (birds can cause illness)
  • Smoking
  • Occupational (e.g. healthcare worker)
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14
Q

What investigations are often carried out for pneumonia?

A
  • Liver function test: albumin levels
  • C-reactive protein test
  • CXR = chest X-ray
  • Urine sample to check for legionella and pneumococcal antigens
  • Arterial blood gas: needle injected into radial artery to measure oxygen and carbon dioxide levels
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15
Q

Where is the shadowing in this CXR?

A

Right lung shadowing, called a consolidation, due to fluid in alveolar spaces.

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16
Q

What score is used to assess the severity of CAP?

A

CURB-65 score

17
Q

What is the CURB-65 score?

A

Used to assess severity of CAP.
- Confusion
- Urea (are kidneys affected?)
- Respiratory rate
- Blood pressure
- Aged 65+

Assessment of severity influences whether patient should be an inpatient or outpatient, guides investigation choices, guides management and antibiotic therapy, consideration of ITU support.

18
Q

How does the CURB-65 score categorise patients?

A
  • Non-severe
  • Intermediate
  • Severe
19
Q

What does compus mentus mean?

A

Not confused, sound mind.

20
Q

What would this patient’s CURB-65 score be?

A

3 (severe)

21
Q

How would you manage this patient?

A
  • Oxygen
  • Analgesia for chest pain
  • IV fluids
  • Antibiotics, make sure to follow national and local guidelines, Abx stewardship
  • Thromboprophylaxis
  • Nutritional support
  • Regular review
22
Q

What are the antibiotic recommendations for adult patients with CAP?

A
  • Low severity = amoxicillin 500mg TDS (if allergic, doxycycline)
  • Moderate severity/intermediate = amoxicillin 500mg-1.0g TDS + clarithromycin 500mg BD
  • High severity = co-amoxiclav 1.2g TDS IV + clarithromycin 500mg BD IV
23
Q

What are the possible complications of pneumonia?

A
  • Para-pneumonic pleural effusion
  • Lung abscess: bacteria cause a cavitation to form
  • Septicaemia: bacteria enter blood stream- haematogenous spread e.g. meningitis, peritonitis, septic arthritis, endocarditis
  • Respiratory failure and hypotension
  • Atrial fibrillation and other cardiac complications
24
Q

Why does antibiotic choice differ with severity of disease?

A
  • Certain microorganisms are more prevalent with each classification (i.e. CAP vs early nosocomial vs late nosocomial)