Atypical Pneumonia Flashcards

1
Q

Describe mycoplasma pneumoniae

A
  • no cell wall

- bacterial membrane contains sterols for stability

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2
Q

Mycoplasma pneumoniae is the classic cause of ____

A

walking pneumonia

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3
Q

Mycoplasma pneumoniae is the most common cause of pneumonia in what population

A

school-aged children (also common in prison and military recruits-aka groups in close quarters)

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4
Q

Pathogenesis of Mycoplasma pneumoniae

A

adhesion binds to ciliated epithelial cells and causes reduced ciliary clearance

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5
Q

How does Mycoplasma pneumoniae present?

A

-insidious onset of dry cough, headache, low-grade fever, myalgia, and sore throat

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6
Q

How is Mycoplasma pneumoniae diagnosed?

A
  • serology (not great)
  • PCR from respiratory secretions
  • cold agglutinins
  • growth on Eaton agar
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7
Q

Note on Cold agglutinins and Mycoplasma pneumoniae

A

IgM autoantibodies against type O RBCS that agglutinate the cells at 4C but not 27C. Half of patients with Mycoplasma pneumoniae will be positive

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8
Q

How is Mycoplasma pneumoniae treated?

A

-macrolide, doxycycline, or fluorquinolone

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9
Q

What other manifestations can Mycoplasma pneumoniae produce?

A
  • hemolysis
  • Rash
  • CNS involvement
  • CV involvement (CHF, myocarditis, etc.)
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10
Q

What type of CNS involvement is most common in Mycoplasma pneumoniae?

A

encephalitis

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11
Q

Describe Chylamydia (Clamydophila pneumoniae)

A

obligate intracellular organism that is the 2nd most common cause of atypical pneumonia

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12
Q

How does the patient population of Clamydophila pneumoniae compare to mycoplasma?

A

older adults in Clamydophila pneumoniae

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13
Q

How is Clamydophila pneumoniae treated?

A

doxycycline

no good diagnostic test

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14
Q

Describe Legionella pneumophila

A

gram negative rod, facultative intracellular

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15
Q

Pathogenesis of Legionella pneumophila

A
  • avoids phagolysosome fusion and replicates within alveolar macrophages
  • endotoxin
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16
Q

How is Legionella pneumophila contracted?

A

aerosol transmission from environmental source habitat (AC systems etc.)

17
Q

What patient population is common in Legionella pneumophila infection?

A
  • older
  • smokers
  • alcoholics
18
Q

Clinically, Legionella pneumophila causes what two diseases?

A
  • Legionnaire’s disease

- Pontiac fever

19
Q

How does Legionnaire’s disease present?

A

severe pneumonia with dry cough, fever, diarrhea, and confusion

20
Q

How does Pontiac disease present?

A

mild flu-like syndrome

21
Q

What does a gram stain of Legionella pneumophila show?

A

neutrophils and macrophages but no organisms (need a silver stain)

22
Q

Labs in Legionella pneumophila infection will show what?

A

hyponatremia

23
Q

What does Legionella pneumophila grow well on?

A

charcoal yeast extract culture with iron and cysteine

24
Q

Treatment of Legionella pneumophila

A

Macrolide (Azithro) or Levofloxacin

25
Q

What is aspiration pneumonia?

A

aspiration of gastric contents

26
Q

What patient population commonly gets aspiration pneumonia?

A

debilitated or unconscious patients, or those with repeated vomiting (alcoholics)

27
Q

What is the common age for Chlamydophila pneumoniae?

A

This type of pneumonia can occur all year and often is mild. The infection is most common in people 65 to 79 years old but can be middle aged

28
Q

T or F. Most cases of viral pneumonia are mild.

A

T. They get better in about 1 to 3 weeks without treatment. Some cases are more serious and may require treatment in a hospital.

29
Q

PCP is common in which patients?

A
  • Have HIV/AIDS or cancer
  • Have had an organ transplant and/orblood and marrow stem cell transplant
  • Take medicines that affect their immune systems