Lower Respiratory Tract Infections Flashcards

1
Q

What is pneumonia?

A

Strictly speaking it means any inflammatory condition affecting the alveoli of the lungs
But usually relates to a bacterial infection

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2
Q

What is the commonest type of organism that causes pneumonia?

A

Bacterial

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3
Q

What other types of organisms can cause pneumonia?

A

Viruses

Fungi

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4
Q

What are symptoms of pneumonia?

A
Cough 
Sputum (purulent, rusty)
SoB
Chest pain (pleuritic)
Fever
Malaise
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5
Q

What are signs of pneumonia?

A
Pyrexia, tachycardia
Tachypnoea
Reduced oxygen saturations
Dullness to percuss affected lobe
Bronchial breathing
Inspiratory creps
Increased vocal resonance
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6
Q

What is the classical CXR finding in pneumonia?

A

Consolidation

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7
Q

What bloods would you do for someone with pneumonia?

A

FBC - usually seen neutrophilia in bacterial infections
UE
CRP - raised in response to infections

May do ABG if low oxygen sats/pre-existing lung disease, e.g. COPD

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8
Q

Aside from CXR/bloods, what other investigation might you do in pneumonia?

A

Sputum microscopy + culture
Blood culture
Urinary legionella anigen
Throat swab (for atypical pathogens)

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9
Q

What organism most commonly causes pneumonia?

A

Strep pneumoniae

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10
Q

What severity scoring system is used to determine best treatment course in pneumonia?

A
CURB 65
C = confusion 
U = urea >7
Resp rate >=30/min
B = BP, systolic <=90 +/or diastolic <=60mmHg

65 - aged >=65

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11
Q

How is a CURB score of 0 managed?

A

In the community

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12
Q

How is a CURB score of 1 managed?

A

Have SaO2 assessed if >92% –> do CXR and manage in community

If CXR shows bilateral/multinodal shadowing hospital admission advised

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13
Q

How is a CURB score of 2+ managed?

A

In hospital (as it represents severe CAP)

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14
Q

What does the CURB correlate with?

A

Risk of mortality at 30 days

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15
Q

What are the basics of treating pneumonia?

A

Antibiotics

Supportive care - oxygen, IV fluids etc.

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16
Q

What is idiopathic interstitial pneumonia?

A

A group of non-infective causes of pneumonia, e.g. COP

17
Q

What is COP a complication of?

A

RA or amiodarone therapy

18
Q

What scoring system for pneumonia should be used in the primary care setting?

A
CRB65
Confusion (abbreviated mental test score <=8/10)
Resp rate >=30/min
BP systolic <=90, diastolic <=60
Aged >=65
19
Q

How should a CRB65 score of 0 be managed?

A

At home

All other scores in hospital

20
Q

What other method may be used to decide if patients need antibiotics for pneumonia in primary care?

A

Point of care CRP testing
CRP <20 - do not give antibiotics
20-100 - consider delayed prescription
>100 - offer antibiotics

21
Q

For what CURB65 score should ITU be considered?

A

3+

22
Q

What investigations should be done for suspected pneumonia?

A

CXR
Intermediate/high risk patients - blood + sputum cultures, pneumococcal and legionella urinary antigen tests
CRP monitoring

23
Q

How is low-severity CAP managed?

A

1st line: amoxicillin (if allergic - tetracycline/macrolide) 5 day course

24
Q

How is moderate/high-severity CAP managed?

A

Dual antibiotic therapy - amoxicillin + macrolide 7-10 day course

Consider co-amoxiclav/ceftriaxone/piperacillin with tazobactam + macrolife in high severity CAP

25
Q

NICE recommend pneumonia patients are not routinely discharged in the last 24 hours if they have 2 or more of:

A
Temp >37.5C
RR >=24
HR >100bpm
Systolic BP 90mmHg or less
O2 <90% on air
Abnormal mental status
Inability to eat without assistance
26
Q

Describe how pneumonia gradually gets better

A

1 week - fever resolved
4 weeks - chest pain + sputum production substantially redued
6 weeks - cough and SoB should be substantially reduced
3 months - most symptoms resolved but fatigue may be present
6 months - should feel normal

27
Q

What are complications of pneumonia?

A
Septicaemia
AKI
Empyema 
Lung abscess
Haemolytic anaemia (mycoplasma)
ARDS
28
Q

What are differentials for pneumonia?

A
TB
Lung cancer
Cardiac failure
PE
Pulmonary vasculitis (e.g. Wegener's)
29
Q

What is an empyema?

A

Pus in the pleural space

30
Q

What is pleuritic chest pain?

A

Chest pain on inspiration due to inflammation of the parietal pleura

31
Q

What do the majority of empyemas follow?

A

A pneumonia

32
Q

What organism most commonly causes an empyema?

A

Strep

33
Q

What are symptoms/signs of an empyema?

A

Consitutional symptoms - malaise, anorexia etc.
Pyrexia, rigors
Dullness to percussion
Reduced breath sounds and reduced vocal resonance
Productive cough
Pleuritic chest pain
SoB

34
Q

What investigations should be ordered for suspected empyema?

A
Blood cultures
CRP 
WCC
CXR
Thoracentesis - pleural fluid appearance, odour, pH, total protein concentration etc. 

NB aspiration of frank pus is diagnostic (no futher Ix req)
Pleural fluid pH <7.2 also diagnostic

35
Q

How is empyema managed?

A

IV antibiotics
Chest tube drainage
Supportive care
Intrapleural fibrinolytics and surgery may be recommended for some patients

36
Q

What organisms are more likely to result in a cavitating pneumonia and hence predispose to lung abscess formation?

A

S. aureus
Pseudomonas
Anaerobes

37
Q

What are symptoms of lung abscesses?

A

Fever, productive cough, wt loss etc.

38
Q

What investigations are used to investigate a suspected lung abscess?

A

CXR

Sputum gram stain, culture

39
Q

How is lung abscess managed?

A

Antibiotics
Chest physio/postural drainage
May require drainage via bronchoscopy or percutaneous drainage