Pathology of pulmonary infection Flashcards

1
Q

what happened to the guy who had ravioli in his alveoli?

A

he pasta way

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2
Q

what is a primary pathogenic microorganism?

A

very pathogenic and infects everyone regardless of health

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3
Q

what is a opportunistic pathogenic microorganism?

A

uses immunosuppression to infect host (the organism is not normally capable of producing disease in patents with intact lung defences) (ex: low grade bacterial pathogens, CMV, pneumocystis jirovecii, other fungi and yeasts)

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4
Q

is the respiratory tract sterile?

A

the upper one is not, the lower one is

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5
Q

what is acute epiglottitis?

A

inflammation of the epiglottis, obstructing the respirator tract, is an upper respiratory tract infection

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6
Q

what is a facultative microorganism?

A

may result to parasitic activity but does not rely on it’s host for the completion of its life cycle

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7
Q

what does the capacity of a patient to resist an infection depend on?

A

state of host defence mechanisms, age of patients

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8
Q

name 6 upper respiratory tract infections

A
  • coryza (common cold)
  • sore throat syndrome
  • acute laryngotracheobronchitis
  • laryngitis
  • sinusitis
  • acute epiglottis
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9
Q

what bacteria can cause acute epiglottis?

A
groupe A beta-haemolytic streptococci
haemophilus influenza (type b- Hib)
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10
Q

what virus can rarely cause acute epiglottis?

A

parainfluenza virus type 4, but not necessarily

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11
Q

name 3 lower respiratory tract infections

A

bronchitis, bronchiolitis, pneumonia

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12
Q

what is the respiratory tract defence mechanism composed of?

A

macrophage-mucocilliary escalator system, general immune system (humeral and cellular immunity), respiratory tract secretion

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13
Q

how does the upper respiratory tract protect the lower one?

A

upper respiratory tract as a ‘filter’

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14
Q

TRUE/FALSE patients will only get respiratory tract infection of all of the defence mechanisms fail

A

FALSE failure of any of these systems increases the risk of respiratory tract infection

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15
Q

what are the components of the macrophage-mucocilliary escalator system?

A

it includes:

  • alveolar macrophages
  • mucociliary escalator
  • cough reflex
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16
Q

how does this system work in the ciliated airways?

A

clearance of particles via the muco-ciliary escalator (cilia push mucous-trapped particles up the airways)

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17
Q

how does this system work in the smaller airways?

A

alveolar macrophages clear the particles by phagocytosis when these deposit on the terminal bronchioles/ proximal alveoli, then take the interstitial pathway via lymph to the lymph nodes

18
Q

what in the airways is lost with influenza?

A

bronchial epithelium lost

19
Q

what 3 ways are there of classifying pneumonia?

A
  • anatomical (via radiology)
  • aetiological (via circumstances, most useful)
  • microbiological (most appropriate for treatment)
20
Q

what 6 different aetiological pneumonia are there?

A
  • community acquired pneumonia
  • hospital acquired (nocosomial) pneumonia
  • pneumonia in the immunocompromised
  • atypical pneumonia
  • aspiration pneumonia
  • recurrent pneumonia
21
Q

what is bronchopneumonia?

A

pneumonia in the middle? ‘often bilateral basal patch opacification relating to the focal nature of the consolidation’

22
Q

what is lobar pneumonia?

A

consolidation on one side only (one lung affected)

23
Q

what are the complications of pneumonia?

A
  • pleurisy, pleural effusion, empyema
  • lung abscess
  • bronchiectasis
  • mass lesion, constructive bronchiolitis, COP (cryptogenic organising pneumonia), all due to aspiration (inhaling food, liquids, or vomiting in lungs)
  • death
24
Q

what happens to most pneumonias?

A

they just resolve

25
Q

what is a lung abscess?

A

obstructed bronchus because of tumour, aspiration of an object, particular organism (staph aureus, some pneumococci, Klebsiella), necrotic lung

26
Q

when can lung abscesses be metastatic?

A

in pyaemia (blood poisoning caused by the spread of pus-forming bacteria)

27
Q

what is bronchiectasis?

A

pathological dilatation of bronchi

28
Q

what causes bronchiectasis?

A

severe infective episode, recurrent infections, proximal bronchial obstruction, lung parenchymal destruction

29
Q

TRUE/FALSE most bronchiectasis start during adulthood

A

WRONG 75% start in childhood

30
Q

what are the symptoms of bronchiectasis?

A

cough, abundant purulent foul sputum, haemoptysis (coughing blood), signs of chronic infection, coarse crackles, clubbing

31
Q

how do you treat bronchiectasis?

A

thin section CT (previously bronchography), postural drainage, antibiotics, surgery

32
Q

what are the main causes of a local bronchial obstruction?

A

tumour, foreign body

33
Q

what are the main reasons for local pulmonary damage?

A

bronchiectasis

34
Q

what are the main reasons for a generalised lung disease?

A

cystic fibrosis, COPD

35
Q

what non-respiratory disease could eventually affect the respiratory tract?

A

anything which compromises the immune system (HIV…)

36
Q

what is aspiration pneumonia?

A

a lung infection developed after you aspirate food, liquid or vomit into your lungs

37
Q

how do you get aspiration pneumonia?

A

vomiting, oesophageal lesion, obstetric anaesthesia, neuromuscular disorders, sedation (basically anything that compromises the system that separates food from airways)

38
Q

is the airflow in airways laminar or turbulent?

A

depends on pressure difference, could be both

39
Q

where does diffusion in the airways happen?

A

beyond terminal bronchiole, in alveoli

40
Q

what is the minimum value of FIO2 to have 98% saturated Hb leave the capillary bed?

A

0,21

41
Q

why does CO2 rapidly equilibrate between blood and air?

A

because it is very soluble