Pneumonia

From Healthpages.wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Pneumonia is an inflammatory condition of the lung affecting primarily the microscopic air sacs known as alveoli. It is usually caused by infection with viruses or bacteria and less commonly other microorganisms certain drugs and other conditions such as autoimmune diseases.Typical symptoms include a cough chest pain fever and difficulty breathing. Diagnostic tools include x-rays and culture of the sputum. Vaccines to prevent certain types of pneumonia are available.

What are the symptoms of Pneumonia?

The most common symptoms of pneumonia are:

  • Cough (with some pneumonias you may cough up greenish or yellow mucus, or even bloody mucus)
  • Fever, which may be mild or high
  • Shaking chills
  • Shortness of breath (may only occur when you climb stairs)

Additional symptoms include:

  • Sharp or stabbing chest pain that gets worse when you breathe deeply or cough
  • Headache
  • Excessive sweating and clammy skin
  • Loss of appetite, low energy, and fatigue
  • Confusion, especially in older people

What causes Pneumonia?

Pneumonia is a common illness that affects millions of people each year in the United States. Germs called bacteria, viruses, and fungi may cause pneumonia.

Ways you can get pneumonia include:

  • Bacteria and viruses living in your nose, sinuses, or mouth may spread to your lungs.
  • You may breathe some of these germs directly into your lungs.
  • You breathe in (inhale) food, liquids, vomit, or secretions from the mouth into your lungs (aspiration pneumonia)
  • Pneumonia caused by bacteria tends to be the most serious. In adults, bacteria are the most common cause of pneumonia.
  • The most common pneumonia-causing germ in adults is Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus).
  • Atypical pneumonia, often called walking pneumonia, is caused by bacteria such as Legionella pneumophila, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Chlamydophila pneumoniae.
  • Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia is sometimes seen in people whose immune system is impaired (due to AIDS or certain medications that suppress the immune system).
  • Staphylococcus aureus, Moraxella catarrhalis, Streptococcus pyogenes, Neisseria meningitidis, Klebsiella pneumoniae, or Haemophilus influenzae are other bacteria that can cause pneumonia.
  • Tuberculosis can cause pneumonia in some people, especially those with a weak immune system.
  • Viruses are also a common cause of pneumonia, especially in infants and young children.

Who is at highest risk?

Risk factors (conditions that increase your chances of getting pneumonia) include:

  • Cigarette smoking
  • Recent viral respiratory infection (common cold, laryngitis, influenza)
  • Difficulty swallowing (due to stroke, dementia, Parkinson's disease, or other neurological conditions)
  • Chronic lung disease (COPD, bronchiectasis, cystic fibrosis)
  • Cerebral palsy
  • Other serious illnesses, such as heart disease, liver cirrhosis, or diabetes mellitus
  • Living in a nursing facility
  • Impaired consciousness (loss of brain function due to dementia, stroke, or other neurologic conditions)
  • Recent surgery or trauma
  • Immune system problem

When to seek urgent medical care? Call your doctor if you have:

  • Worsening respiratory symptoms
  • Shortness of breath, shaking chills, or persistent fevers
  • Rapid or painful breathing
  • A cough that brings up bloody or rust-colored mucus
  • Chest pain that worsens when you cough or inhale
  • Night sweats or unexplained weight loss
  • Signs of pneumonia and weak immune system, as with HIV or chemotherapy
  • Infants with pneumonia may not have a cough. Call your doctor if your infant makes grunting noises or the area below the rib cage is retracting while breathing.

Diagnosis

If you have pneumonia, you may be working hard to breathe, or breathing fast. Crackles are heard when listening to your chest with a stethoscope. Other abnormal breathing sounds may also be heard through the stethoscope or via percussion (tapping on your chest wall). The health care provider will likely order a chest x-ray if pneumonia is suspected. Some patients may need other tests, including:

  1. CBC to check white blood cell count
  2. Arterial blood gases to see if enough oxygen is getting into your blood from the lungs
  3. CT scan of the chest
  4. Gram's stain and culture of your sputum to look for the organism causing your symptoms
  5. Pleural fluid culture if there is fluid in the space surrounding the lungs

Treatment options

Your doctor must first decide whether you need to be in the hospital. If you are treated in the hospital, you will receive fluids and antibiotics in your veins, oxygen therapy, and possibly breathing treatments. It is very important that your antibiotics are started very soon after you are admitted. You are more likely to be admitted to the hospital if you:

  • Have another serious medical problem
  • Have severe symptoms
  • Are unable to care for yourself at home, or are unable to eat or drink
  • Are older than 65 or a young child
  • Have been taking antibiotics at home and are not getting better

However, many people can be treated at home. If bacteria are causing the pneumonia, the doctor will try to cure the infection with antibiotics. It may be hard for your health care provider to know whether you have a viral or bacterial pneumonia, so you may receive antibiotics. Patients with mild pneumonia who are otherwise healthy are sometimes treated with oral macrolide antibiotics. Patients with other serious illnesses, such as heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or emphysema, kidney disease, or diabetes are often given different medications.

If the cause is a virus, typical antibiotics will NOT be effective. Sometimes, however, your doctor may use antiviral medication. You can take these steps at home:

  • Drink plenty of fluids to help loosen secretions and bring up phlegm.
  • Get lots of rest. Have someone else do household chores.
  • Do not take cough medicines without first talking to your doctor. Cough medicines may make it harder for your body to cough up the extra sputum.
  • Control your fever with panadol or nurofen.
Links
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pneumonia
Relevant Occupations
Infectious Disease Specialist
Respiratory and Sleep Medicine Specialist
Hashtags