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Download Pneumococcal Pneumonia
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Lower respiratory tract • Lungs are axenic (no normal flora) – Pneumonia • Described by location, pathogen or way contracted – Pleurisy Pneumococcal Pneumonia • Most common bacterial pneumonia • Causative agent – Streptococcus pnuemoniae • Gram positive • Encapsulated, diplococci • Signs and Symptoms – – – – Cough; fever; congestion; chest pain; rust tinged sputum Breathing becomes shallow and rapid Skin becomes dusky due to poor oxygenation Consolidation may occur – Recovery is usually complete • Most strains do not cause permanent damage to lung tissue – Complications • • • • Pleural effusions Septicemia Endocarditis Meningitis • Epidemiology – 75% of healthy individuals carry encapsulated strain in their throat • Bacterial rarely reach lung • Risk of pneumonia rises when cilia destroyed • Gram stain of sputum used for diagnosis • Pneumococci confirmed with quelling reaction • Bacteria that reach alveoli cause inflammatory response • • • • • Adhesions Capsule Phosphorylocholine in cell wall Pneumolysin (cytotoxin) IGA proteases • Prevention – Pneumococcal vaccine • Treatment – Antibiotics successful if given early • Penicillin (some resistance) • Erythromycin, cephalosporin and chloramphenicol Klebsiella Pneumonia • Leading cause of nosocomial pneumonia • Causative agent – Klebsiella pneumoniae • Gram negative • Encapsulated, Bacillus • Produce mucoid colonies • Signs and Symptoms: – Typical pneumonia symptoms combined with a thick, bloody sputum and recurrent chills – Organism causes tissue death • Leads to formation abscess in lung or other tissues • Endotoxin can trigger shock and disseminated intravascular coagulation • Epidemiology – Endogenous – Difficult for K. pneumoniae to infect lungs of healthy persons • Leading causes of nosocomial death • Also causes UTI, meningitis and wound infections – Diagnosed with chest x-ray and sputum culture • Prevention – No vaccine available – Employ good aseptic technique • Treatment – Antimicrobial treatment limited • Cephalosporin combined with an aminoglycoside • Tissue damage and release of endotoxin can cause permanent damage to lungs • High fatalities even with treatment Mycoplasmal Pneumonia • “Walking pneumonia” – Leading pneumonia in children • Causative agent – Mycoplasma pneumoniae • Small, pleomorphic, Gram + • No cell wall • Prominent capsule • Signs and Symptoms – Onset is gradual • 1-4 week incubation period – First symptoms include • Fever, headache, muscle pain, fatigue, sore throat and excessive sweating • atypical for pneumonia • Persistent dry cough for several weeks • Organism attaches to receptors on epithelium – Adhesion protein – Interferes with cilia, cells die and slough off – Capsule protects it from phagocytosis – Inflammation initiates thickening of bronchial and alveolar walls • Causes difficulty in breathing • Epidemiology – Spread through aerosol droplets • Survive for long periods in secretions – Grow slowly in culture • 2-6 weeks for “fried egg” colonies to appear – Diagnosis difficult • Serological tests required • Prevention and treatment – No practical prevention • Avoid crowding in schools and military facilities • Aseptic technique – Antibiotic treatment • Penicillins are ineffectual (WHY?) • Antibiotics of choice are tetracycline and erythromycin Pertussis • Whooping Cough • Causative agent – Bordetella pertussis • Small, Gram negative • Encapsulated, coccobacillus • Signs and Symptoms: – Catarrhal stage – cold symptoms (1-2 weeks) – Paroxysmal stage – severe coughing (2-4 weeks) • • • • Coughing followed by characteristic “whoop” May cause vessels in eyes to rupture Cyanosis Vomiting, diarrhea and seizure may occur – Convalescent phase –persistent cough (months) • Pathogen enters respiratory tract and attaches to ciliated cells – Produces 2 forms of adhesions • Colonizes upper and lower respiratory tract – Produces numerous toxic products • Mucus secretion increases and cilia action decreases • Cough reflex is only mechanism for clearing secretions • Decreased blood flow and WBC activity • Epidemiology – – – – – Spreads via infected respiratory droplets Highly contagious Most infectious during runny nose period Classically disease of infants Often overlooked as a persistent cold in adults – High risk of secondary infections! • Prevention – Immunization • Combined with Diphtheria and tetanus toxoids • DTaP • Treatment – Primarily supportive – Erythromycin may reduce infectivity if given early Tuberculosis • TB; Consumption • Causative agent – Mycobacterium tuberculosis • Gram positive • Acid fast, slender bacillus • Cord factor • Signs and Symptoms – Chronic illness – Initial symptoms: • Minor cough and mild fever – Progressive symptoms: • Fatigue; night sweats; weight loss; chest pain and labored breathing • Chronic productive cough – Sputum often bloody • 3 types of tuberculosis: – Primary TB- initial case of tuberculosis disease – Secondary TB - reactivated – Disseminated TB- tuberculosis involving multiple systems • Primary TB – Transmitted through respiratory droplets – Pathogens taken up by alveolar macrophages • fusion of phagosome with lysosomes prevented – Pathogen replicates inside macrophages slowly killing them – Intense immune reaction occurs • WBCs surround infected cells and release inflammatory chemicals – Other body cells deposit collagen fibers – macrophages and lung cells form tubercle – Infected cells die producing caseous (cheesy) necrosis – Body may deposit calcium around tubercles • Ghon complex – Secondary TB • tubercle ruptures and reestablishes active infection • More common in immunosupressed • Leading killer of HIV+ individuals – Disseminated TB • Some macrophages carry pathogen through blood and lymph to other sites of body • Bone marrow, spleen, kidneys, spinal cord and brain • Epidemiology – 1/3 of world population infected – Annual mortality of ~ 2 million – Estimated 10 million Americans infected • Rate highest among non-white, elderly poor people – Small infecting dose • As little as ten inhaled organisms • Not very virulent but high mortality • Tuberculin test • Tuberculosis antigen injected under skin • Injection site become red and firm if positive • Positive test does not indicate active disease • Definitive tests include sputum samples and chest x-rays • Prevention – Vaccination used in other parts of the world – Prophylactic antibacterial treatment for exposed individuals • Treatment – Antibiotic treatment • Rifampin, Isoniazid, streptomycin and ethambutol • MDR strains • Therapy lasts up to 6 months (DOTS)