Edited Cap
Edited Cap
Edited Cap
PRESENTATIO
N
SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY-MATIAS H. AZNAR
MEMORIAL COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
ASOY, GABUCO, PANILAGAO, MALAQUE, MAñEZ
• Body malaise
PTA
History of Present Illness
PTA
History of Present Illness
Non-hypertensive
Non-diabetic
Non-asthmatic
2004- S/P Cesarean Section x1 20 to prolonged
labor (CDUH)
Past Medical History
G5P4(4014)
G4 Spontaneous abortion- D&C (2002)
G5 Cesarean Section (BT- 1 u PRBC)
LMP- 12/22/14
Family History
Heredofamilial Diseases
(+) DM- both
(+) HPN- both
(+)BA- both
(+) Lung cancer- paternal
Personal and Social History
High School graduate
Allergy- perfume, dust, crustaceans
Non-smoker
Non-alcoholic
Non-drug user
Personal and Social History
No history of travel
Patient lives in an uncongested area
No pets or animals at home
Sister- PTB- treatment completed
Patient’s live-in partner has
nonproductive cough (asthmatic), known
smoker
Review of Systems
General: No weakness, no sweats
Skin: No pruritus, no lesions, no burns, no bruising
Head: No headache, no dizziness, no history of trauma
Eyes: No acuity change, pain, and diplopia
Ears: No ear ache
Nose and Sinuses: No history of nosebleed, No nasal congestion
Throat: No bleeding of gums, no dentitions
Breasts: No lumps, no nipple discharge, no pain
Cardiovascular: No history of cardiovascular problems, no palpitations,
no easy fatigability
Review of Systems
PVS: strong and equal distal and peripheral pulses, CRT < 2 seconds
CRANIAL NERVES:
CN I: intact sense of smell
CN II: pupils equally round and reactive to light
CN III, IV, VI: EOMs intact
CN V: intact corneal reflex
CN VII: (-) facial asymmetry
CN VIII: intact sense of hearing and balance
CN IX, X: intact gag reflex
CN XI: able to shrug shoulders with or without resistance
CN XII: tongue is midline at rest and upon protrusion
Physical Examination
CEREBELLAR:
Well coordinated finger to nose test, no ataxia, no nystagmus
SENSORY:
intact light touch, pain, and temperature sensation
100 100
MOTOR: 100 100
5/5 on all extremities
REFLEX:
COMMUNITY ACQUIRED
PNEUMONIA-LOW RISK
Community Acquired Pneumonia-
Low Risk
CLINICAL PRESENTATION RULE IN/OUT
Acute cough
Fever
Shortness of Breath
Sputum Production
Crackles, bronchial breath sounds
Stable Vital Signs:
RR< 30/min
PR< 125bpm
T> 36C or <40
BP >90/60
No altered mental state of acute onset
No suspected Aspiration
No or stable Co-morbid Condition
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSES
Pulmonary Tuberculosis
Bronchial Asthma
Acute Bronchitis
Pulmonary Tuberculosis
No history of smoking
DIAGNOSTICS
DIAGNOSTICS
Supportive diagnostics
AFB smear
Pulmonary Function Test
Further Work-Up
CT scan and MRI
PCR test
Serology test: IgM
Antigen test
Patient’s Actual Management
HEMATOLOGY REPORT
1/16/15 3:51 AM
COMPLETE BLOOD RESULT Serology Report
COUNT 1/16/15 4:39AM
BLOOD COUNT DENGUE NS1 RESULT
ANTIGEN
WBC 23.49 ↑
RBC 4.57 NS1 Antigen Negative
HGB 11.8 ↓
HCT 35.3 ↓ Ig M Antibody Negative
PLATELET 225
Ig G Antibody Negative
DIFFERENTIAL COUNT
RELATIVE DIFFERENTIAL
COUNT
91.2 ↑
NEUTROPHIL (%) 4.0 ↓
LYMPHOCYTE (%) 2.8 ↓
MONOCYTE (%) 1.3 OUT PATIENT
EOSINOPHILS (%) 0.2
BASOPHILS (%) 0.5
LUC (%)
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY REPORT
1/16/2015 05:10 pm
Test Result Referrence unit
IMPRESSION:
RIGHT MIDDLE LOBE PNEUMONIA
BILATERAL PLEURAL THICKENING AND/OR MINIMAL EFFUSION
X-ray- Paranasal Sinuses- complete Waters
and CALDW
IMPRESSION:
MILD LEFT MAXILLARY SINUS DISEASE
ACID FAST result 1/17/2015
STAIN
Sputum Negative for
acid fast
GRAM STAIN 1/17/2015
Sputum 200-220/LPF pus
cells
20-25/LPF
epithelial cells
Occasional gram (+)
cocci in pairs and in
clusters
Occasional gram (+)
bacilli
Rare gram (-)
bacilli
Community Acquired Pneumonia- Moderate Risk
CLINICAL PRESENTATION RULE IN/OUT
Acute cough
Fever
Shortness or Breath
Sputum Production
Crackles, bronchial breath sounds
Stable Vital Signs:
RR>30/min
PR> 125bpm
T >40 or <36
BP <90/60
Altered mental state of acute onset
suspected Aspiration
Decompensated Co-morbid Condition
Chest X-Ray
• Multilobar infiltrates
• Pleural effusion
• Abscess
Final diagnosis
COMMUNITY ACQUIRED
PNEUMONIA- MODERATE RISK
ACUTE RHINOSINUSITIS
Patient’s Actual Treatment
IDEAL MANAGEMENT ACTUAL TREATMENT
Antibiotic Treatment Azithromycin dehydrate (Zithromax)
500 mg tablet OD
Piperacillin Sodium Tazobactam Sodium
(PIPTAZ 4gm/500 mg vial) q 8 hrs IV
Gray Hepatization
no new erythrocytes are extravasating, and those already
present have been lysed and degraded
neutrophil is the predominant cell, fibrin deposition is
abundant, and bacteria have disappeared
successful containment of the infection and improvement in
gas exchange
Resolution
the macrophage reappears as the dominant cell type
The debris of neutrophils, bacteria, and fibrin has been
cleared, as has the inflammatory response
Etiology
TYPICAL BACTERIAL PATHOGENS
S. pneumoniae
Haemophilus influenzae
(in selected patients) S. aureus
gram-negative bacilli such as Klebsiella pneumoniae and Pseudomonas
aeruginosa
Anaerobes
only when an episode of aspiration has occurred days to
weeks before presentation for pneumonia
often complicated by abscess formation and significant
empyemas or parapneumonic effusions
S. aureus pneumonia
known to complicate influenza infection
MRSA
reported as the primary etiologic agent of CAP
serious consequence: necrotizing pneumonia
Etiology
Epidemiology
CA-MRSA pneumonia
more likely in patients with skin colonization or infection
with CA-MRSA
Enterobacteriaceae
recently been hospitalized and/or received antibiotic
therapy
or who have comorbidities such as alcoholism, heart
failure, or renal failure
Epidemiology
P. aeruginosa
with severe structural lung disease, such as bronchiectasis,
cystic fibrosis, or severe COPD
Legionella infection
diabetes, hematologic malignancy, cancer, severe renal
disease, HIV infection, smoking, male gender, and a recent
hotel stay or ship cruise
Epidemiologic Factors
Epidemiologic Factors
Clinical Manifestations
Febrile
tachycardia
History of chills and/or sweats
Cough
Shortness of breath
Chest pain
GI symptoms
Fatigue
Headache
Myalgias and arthralgias
Clinical Manifestations
Is this pneumonia?
What is the etiology?
Clinical Diagnosis
Importance of History and PE cannot be
overemphasized
Epidemiologic clues, such as travel to areas
with known endemic pathogens may alert
the physician to specific possibilities.
Sensitivity and specificity of findings on PE
average 58% and 67%, respectively.
Chest radiography is often necessary to
differentiate CAP from other conditions.
Radiographic findings may include risk
factors for increased severity (cavitation
or multilobar involvement).
Etiologic Diagnosis
The benefit of establishing a microbial
etiology can be questioned, esp. with cost
of diagnostic testing.
Except for 2% of CAP patients who are
admitted to the ICU, NO data exist to show
that treatment directed at a specific
pathogen is statistically superior to empiric
therapy.
Identification of an unexpected pathogen
allows narrowing of the initial empirical
regimen that decreases antibiotic
selection pressure, lessening the risk of
resistance.
Without C&S data, trends in resistance
cannot be followed accurately, and
appropriate empirical therapeutic
regimens are harder to devise.
Gram’s stain and culture of
sputum
The main purpose of the sputum Gram’s
stain is to ensure that a sample is suitable
for culture.
>25 neutrophils and <10 squamous
epithelial cells/lpf
Even in cases of proven bacteremic
pneumococcal pneumonia, the yield of
positive cultures from sputum samples is
≤50%
The greatest benefit of staining and
culturing respiratory secretions is to alert
the physician of unsuspected and or
resistant pathogens ans to permit
appropriate modification of treatment.
Blood Cultures
Previously healthy:
Amoxicillin
OR
Extended macrolides
Streptococcus pneumoniae (suspected atypical pathogens)
Haemophilus influenza
Low-risk Chlamydophilia pneumonia
Mycoplasma pneumonia With stable comorbid illness:
CAP ß-lactam/ß-lactamase inhibitor
Moraxella catarrhalis
Enteric Gram-negative bacilli combination (BLIC) or second-
(among those with co-morbid disease) generation oral cephalosporins
+ extended macrolides
Alternative:
Third-generation oral
cephalosporin + extended
macrolide
Phase Description Empiric Therapy
Streptococcus pneumoniae
IV non-antipseudomonal ß-
Haemophilus influenza
lactam (BLIC, cephalosporin or
Chlamydophilia pneumonia
carbapenem) + extended
Mycoplasma pneumonia
Moderate-risk macrolide
Moraxella catarrhalis
CAP OR
Enteric Gram-negative bacilli
IV non-antipseudomonal ß-
Legionella pneumophila
lactam + respiratory
Anaerobes
fluoroquinolones
(among those with co-morbid disease)
Phase Description Empiric Therapy
Previously healthy:
Amoxicillin
Streptococcus pneumoniae OR
Haemophilus influenza Extended macrolides
Chlamydophilia pneumonia (suspected atypical pathogens)
Mycoplasma pneumonia
High-risk Moraxella catarrhalis
Enteric Gram-negative bacilli With stable comorbid illness:
CAP ß-lactam/ß-lactamase inhibitor
Legionella pneumophila
Anaerobes combination (BLIC) or second-
(among those with co-morbid disease) generation oral cephalosporins
Staphylococcus aureus + extended macrolides
Pseudomonas aeruginosa Alternative:
Third-generation oral
cephalosporin + extended
macrolide
Assessing Response to
Therapy
Response to therapy expected within 24 to
72 hours of initiating treatment
Fever should decrease within 72 hours
Temp. should normalize within 5 days
Respiratory signs should return to normal
HR, BP, sensorium, O2 saturation, and inspired
oxygen concentration
Follow-up cultures of blood and sputum are
not indicated for patients who are
responding to treatment
Failure to improve after 3 days of
treatment is an indication for
reassessment
Incorrect diagnosis
Presence of a complicating non-infectious
condition (PE,CHF, vasculitis, MI
Resistant microorganism o an unexpected
pathogen
Antibiotic is ineffective or causing an allergic
reaction
Impaired local or systemic host defences
Local or distant complications of pneumonia
(e.g. parapneumonic effusion, empyema, lung
abscess, ARDS, metastatic infection,
endocarditis)
Overwhelming infection
Slow response in the elderly patient
Exacerbation of co-morbid illnesses
Nosocomial superinfection
PROGNOSIS
Depends on patient’s age,
comorbidities, and site of treatment
(inpatient or outpatient)
Young patient without comorbidity do
well and usually recover fully after
approximately 2 weeks
Older
patients and those with
comorbid conditions can take several
weeks longer to fully recover
Overall mortality rate for the
outpatient group is <1%
Patients requiring hospitalization
have an overall mortality rate at
10%, with 50% of deaths directly
attributable to pneumonia
PREVENTION
Main preventive measure is
vaccination
Influenza
vaccination is
recommended for the prevention of
CAP.
Pneumococcal vaccination is
recommended for the prevention of
invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD)
in adults.
Smoking cessation is recommended
for all persons with CAP who smoke.
Datasuggests that cigarette
smoking(passive or otherwise) is the
major avoidable risk factor for
acute pneumonia in adults.