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Pneumonia Basics

Pneumonia (the ancient Greek word for lungs) is defined as an infection involving the alveoli of the lungs. It occurs in patients of all age groups, but young children and the elderly, as well as immunocompromised and immune deficient patients, are especially at risk. Causal therapy is with antibiotics.

Pneumonia Symptoms

Symptoms may include:

  • Common
  • Cough with greenish or yellow mucus
  • Fever with shaking chills (rigors)
  • Sharp or stabbing chest pain, worsened by deep breaths or coughs
  • Rapid, shallow breathing (painful quick breathing)
  • Shortness of breath
  • Fever of 39.5°C (103°F) and higher
  • Painful cough
  • Rarer
  • Bloody mucus
  • Headache, including migraine headache
  • Excessive sweating and clammy skin
  • Loss of appetite
  • Excessive fatigue
  • Cyanosis

Pneumonia can progress to sepsis ("blood poisoning") and acute respiratory distress syndrome if untreated. These are the main causes of death in patients with untreated pneumonia.

Diagnosis of Pneumonia

For the diagnosis of pneumonia, an infiltrate on an X-ray of the chest is the gold standard. Supportive diagnostic tests are microbiological culture of sputum and/or blood. Blood tests are generally performed when a pneumonia is suspected: a full blood count often shows neutrophilia (except in some immunocompromised and all neutropenic patients). Renal function may have deteriorated if there is sepsis. Electrolytes can show hyponatremia (low sodium levels); this is often due to secretion antidiuretic hormone by pulmonary tissue; it is thought to be more frequent in tuberculosis and legionaires' disease. Is possible to perform serological assays for atypical pathogens (Mycoplasma, Legionella and Chlamydia).

In nosocomial (hospital-acquired) pneumonia and the pneumonias of the immunocompromised, diagnosis can be difficult, and CT scanning of the lungs can be required to differentiate possible causes (e.g. pulmonary embolism). CT scanning is also used when the symptoms and physical examination point at possible different causes for the complaints (e.g. vasculitis, sarcoidosis, lung cancer).

Classification of Pneumonia

There are several different classification schemes: microbiological, radiological, age-related, anatomical, point of acquiring infection. Generally, the following types are used:

  • lobar - pneumonia that results in the consolidation of a pulmonary lobe (generally due to Streptococcus pneumoniae)
  • multilobar - pneumonia that results in the consolidation of more than one lobe
  • community-acquired - pneumonia in a patient who is not or has not recently been in the hospital
  • hospital-acquired or nosocomial - pneumonia in a patient in a hospital (or recently discharged)
  • "walking" - outdated term, pneumonia in a patient who is still able to walk, a mild pneumonia, usually due to mycoplasma
  • pneumococcal - pneumonia due to S. pneumoniae.
  • atypical - pneumonia due to either Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, or Legionella.

The main classification used in medical journals is that between the point of infection: community-acquired and hospital-acquired. Furthermore, infections in the immunocompromised, as well as aspiration pneumonia, are usually treated as separate disease entities as they have other causal agents, as well as a different clinical course.

Types of pneumonia

Walking Pneumonia

Walking Pneumonia is a mild form of pneumonia. It is fairly out dated, but still used often to refer to a pneumonia sufferer that still has the ability to walk.

Community-acquired pneumonia

  • Epidemiology - Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a serious illness. It is the fourth most common cause of death in the UK, and sixth in the USA. 85% of cases of CAP are caused by the typical bacterial pathogens, namely, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and Moraxella catarrhalis. The remaining 15% are caused by atypical pathogens, namely Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae, and Legionella species. Unusual aerobic gram-negative bacilli (for example, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter, Enterobacter) rarely cause CAP.
  • Clinical features - typical symptoms include cough, purulent sputum production, shortness of breath, pleuritic chest pain, fevers and chills. On examination, one notes rapid respiratory rate and heart rate and signs of pulmonary consolidation. In the elderly, symptoms and signs are vague and non-specific. They may consist of headache, malaise, diarrhea, confusion, falling, and decreased appetite. Diagnosis is confirmed by chest x-ray. In general, patients who present with what appears to be CAP, with findings confined to the lungs and no laboratory evidence of extrapulmonary involvement, have CAP caused by a typical pathogen. Patients who have pneumonia plus extrapulmonary physical findings or laboratory features (such as elevations in liver function test results) have an atypical pneumonia.

Hospital-acquired pneumonia

Hospital-acquired pneumonia, also called nosocomial pneumonia, is a lung infection acquired after hospitalization for another illness or procedure. It is considered a separate clinical entity from CAP because the causes, microbiology, treatment and prognosis are different. Hospitalized patients have a variety of risk factors for pneumonia, including mechanical ventilation, prolonged malnutrition, underlying cardiac and pulmonary diseases, achlorhydria and immune disorders. Additionally, pathogens thrive in hospitals that could not survive in other environments. These pathogens include resistant aerobic gram-negative rods, such as Pseudomonas, Enterobacter and Serratia, resistant gram positive cocci, such as MRSA. Because of risk factors, underlying morbidity and resistant bacteria, hospital-acquired pneumonia tends to be more deadly than its community counterpart. Antibiotics used for hospital-acquired pneumonia include aminoglycosides, fluoroquinolones, carbapenems, and vancomycin. Multiple antibiotics are administered in combination in order to cover all the possible organisms effectively and rapidly, before the infectious agent can be known. Antibiotic choice varies from hospital to hospital as the likely pathogens and resistance patterns vary similarly.

Other pneumonias

  • Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
  • Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
  • Bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia
  • Eosinophilic pneumonia

Pathophysiology

Pneumonia is an infectious disease by definition, and whether a patient is prone to develop pneumonia depends on the presence of pathogens but equally on the patient's immune system and other factors. Most pneumonias are not epidemic, although infection with influenza virus can be so defined.

Breathing problems, as often present in patients after a stroke, in Parkinson's disease, hospitalisation or surgery and mechanical ventilation can all increase the likelihood of pneumonia. Similarly, inability to clear sputum (as in cystic fibrosis) or retention of sputum (as in bronchiectasis) can lead to pneumonia.

After splenectomy (removal of the spleen), a patient is more prone to pneumonia due to the spleen's role in developing immunity against the polysaccharides on pneumococcus bacteria.

Prevention of walking pneumonia

Vaccination with the pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine is recommended for adults older than 65 and persons with chronic disease (except asthma). Also for Native Alaskans and certain Native Americans12. Pneumoccocal pneumonia kills more Americans than all other diseases combined that could be partially prevented by vaccination1.

Therapy

Antibiotics are the only causal therapy for pneumonia. The antibiotics that are used depend on the nature of the pneumonia and the immune status of the patient. Amoxicillin is used as first-line therapy in the vast majority of community patients, sometimes with added clarithromycin. In North America, where the atypical forms of community acquired pneumonia are becoming more common, clarithromycin, azithromycin, and the fluoroquinolones have displaced the penicillin-derived drugs as first line therapy. In hospitalized patients and immune deficient patients, local guidelines generally determine which combination of (generally intravenous) antibiotics is used.

Prognosis and mortality

The clinical state of the patient at time of presentation is a strong predictor of the clinical course. Many clinicians use the Pneumonia Severity Score to calculate whether a patient requires admission to hospital, based on the severity of symptoms, underlying disease and age3. In the United States mortality from pneumococcal pneumonia is 1 in 20, in cases where the disease progresses to blood poisoning, bacteremia, 2 of 10 die and where the disease affects the brain, meningitis, 3 of 10 die.

History of pneumonia

Before the advent of antibiotics, pneumonia was often fatal. When penicillin was discovered in the 20th century, it was the first causal therapy. Most community-acquired strains of S. pneumoniae are still penicillin-sensitive.

Notable pneumonia sufferers

Many famous people throughout the years have succumbed to pneumonia and its complications. As it is a common cause of death in the chronically ill, this is not always reported in the press.

  • John Adams
  • A well known and tragically sudden death due to pneumonia was that of Muppets creator Jim Henson in the early 1990s.
  • 19th Century sharpshooter Calamity Jane.
  • 19th Century composer Franz Liszt.
  • On February 1, 1944 the Dutch painter Piet Mondrian died of pneumonia. He had been ill for a week.
  • In 1989, actor Jim Backus died of pneumonia, after suffering for years with Parkinson's Disease. Backus was best known for his roles as the voice of animated character, Mr. Magoo, and as Thurston Howell III on television's Gilligan's Island.
  • Television producer and director Bruce Paltrow, 58, died of the disease while traveling in Rome in 2002. Paltrow was survived at the time by his wife, actress Blythe Danner, and his daughter, actress Gwyneth Paltrow.
  • In the late 30s, movie mogul Irving Thalberg was finally felled by pneumonia after suffering for years from heart problems. Thalberg died before even reaching his 40th birthday and some say Louis B. Mayer, let alone Norma Shearer, never recovered from the loss of MGM's creative "boy wonder."
  • In 2005, John Raitt, Broadway star of the 50s and 60s in such hits as The Pajama Game and Carousel, died due to complications from pneumonia. His daughter is pop and blues singer, Bonnie Raitt.
  • Nicole DeHuff, an actress who played Teri Polo's sister in Meet the Parents, died of causes related to pneumonia. She was 31 years and 41 days in age. The actress died Feb. 16, 2005, in Hollywood, four days after she reportedly checked into a Los Angeles hospital, was misdiagnosed, and sent home with orders to take Tylenol.

Posted by Staff at May 13, 2005 6:32 AM

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Comments Archive

I am an 'ARDS with sepsis' survivor from March of 2004. I was perfectly healthy with no obviuos symptoms, just tired for a day. Then one morning I woke up and didn't make any sense when I spoke. Unknown to anyone, my brain was being deprived of oxygen. I snapped out of it by mid afternoon but my roommate was really concerned. The next morning, the same thing happened but this time I went deeper and didn't snap out of it. My roommate opted to not even wait for any ambulance, that he could get me to the hospital faster. My legs were blue by time he carried me into the ER. One lung was totally full of fluid and the other just slightly better. I spent the next month in an induced coma. Recovery has been very difficult but the most shattering aspect is that there is an illness just lurking that can hit and kill you within hours to a couple of days and people don't realize that it exists! Only one out of seven doctors had reference to 'ARDS' in the records yet it was the clear cut final diagnosis. It started out with pneumonia and rapidly evolved. I had been to a job interview at a hospital two days before my collapse. Without the information I have gained from the ARDS Foundation, I know for a fact that my recovery psychologically would have been tragically impaired. (There are also problems in ARDS recovery that is totally different from any other illness such as intense dreams while in the coma and severe PTSD that hits hard and fast. It is still hard to believe that there is something so deadly and so unknown by people that can hit anyone at anytime. I have taken the pneumonia vaccination which seems to be the only thing anyone can do in prevention. It may be beneficial to reference ARDS and I highly recommend contacting the ARDS Foundation through their web site. I thank you for the information and education you are providing as pneumonia can strike without warning and in my case, seemingly without cause (although I am sure there is an obscure cause hidden somewhere!)

Posted by: Therese at September 16, 2005 9:41 PM

my mother has pneumonia from getting surgery and she was doing good for about a week on antibiotics but then one morning she wakes up with a 102 fever is that common. To be treated with antibiotics for a week and then get a fever after?

Posted by: Rebecca Grillo at December 12, 2005 11:45 PM

Please help me understand what kind of pneumonia could produce absolutely no recognizable signs. My ten year old who had never missed a day of school, became ill on Dec. 20 and started complaining of not breathing right and drinking lots of water. However, the autopsy revealed the pneumonia had been in her lungs for at least a month calling it "old pneumonia" yet no one saw a sign. PE teachers didn't, she kept up fine. She never ran a fever, she never coughed, she never complained once except after a really bad intentional being thrown body down on a cement drive. She caught herself by hands and knees which were bleeding. I reported the person who did this. It was amonth and one half before her death. A week after this incident she complained that that day she couldn't barely breath in running in P.E. I alerted the P.E. teacher to notice if this happened again. However, no one saw another sign until she was with her grandmother and she asked to go to hospital. Grandmother thought it could wait until Monday morning, by the time she got there she had a seizure as she was registering to see doctor. The cause of death was the seizure and pneumonia had lowered her soduim level plus the vomiting and drinking water and urinating all which was just the night before. Nothing gave me any indication, she didn't even cough. No runnny nose. No cold, no fever. What could cause this?

Posted by: Beth HIggins at April 19, 2006 6:33 PM

Please help me understand what kind of pneumonia could produce absolutely no recognizable signs. My ten year old who had never missed a day of school, became ill on Dec. 20 and started complaining of not breathing right and drinking lots of water. However, the autopsy revealed the pneumonia had been in her lungs for at least a month calling it "old pneumonia" yet no one saw a sign. PE teachers didn't, she kept up fine. She never ran a fever, she never coughed, she never complained once except after a really bad intentional being thrown body down on a cement drive. She caught herself by hands and knees which were bleeding. I reported the person who did this. It was amonth and one half before her death. A week after this incident she complained that that day she couldn't barely breath in running in P.E. I alerted the P.E. teacher to notice if this happened again. However, no one saw another sign until she was with her grandmother and she asked to go to hospital. Grandmother thought it could wait until Monday morning, by the time she got there she had a seizure as she was registering to see doctor. The cause of death was the seizure and pneumonia had lowered her soduim level plus the vomiting and drinking water and urinating all which was just the night before. Nothing gave me any indication, she didn't even cough. No runnny nose. No cold, no fever. What could cause this?

Posted by: Beth HIggins at April 19, 2006 6:34 PM