Title: Nosocomial Pneumonias
1 2Nosocomial Pneumonias
- Hospital-acquired pneumonia - pneumonia 48 hours
or more after admission, and was not incubating
at the time of admission - Ventilator-associated pneumonia - pneumonia that
arises more than 48-72 hours after endotracheal
intubation - Health Care Associated Pneumonia (HCAP)
- i. hospitalized in an acute care hospital
2days in - preceding 90 days
- ii. nursing home or long-term care facility
resident - iii. recent iv chemotherapy, or wound care
within - past 30 days
- iv. attended a hospital or hemodialysis clinic
3HOST Impaired immune function Comorbid
illness Prior surgery/antibiotics
ENVIRONMENT Infected air,water, fomites,instrument
s Cross-contamination
- PATHOGEN
- Inoculum
- - Virulent strain (MDR)
PATHOGENESIS NOSOCOMIAL PNEUMONIA
4DIAGNOSIS OF HAP
Clinical
Microbiology
Chest X ray
- New onset fever
- Purulent expectoration
- Tachycardia
- Tachypnoea
- Leukocytosis /
- Leukopenia
- Need of higher FiO2
- Microbiology
- To identify etiology
- De-escalate therapy
- Decide duration of therapy
- Clinical diagnosis,
- high sensitivity,
- low specificity
- empiric treatment
5Drug Resistance Factors
- Â Sicker inpatient population
- Immuno-compromised patients
- New procedures instrumentation
- Emerging pathogens
- Complacency regarding antibiotics
- Ineffective infection control and compliance
- Increased antibiotic use
6Principles of therapy
- Start empiric therapy pending reports of culture
and drug-sensitivity test - Choose antibiotics based on probable organisms as
cause of infection - Combination therapy is preferred
- Parenteral route should be chosen
- Adequate dosages must be used
- Change the drug/s after culture and sensitivity
reports - Monitor for effects side efffects of drugs
7SUMMARY
- Nosocomial Pneumonias are frequent associated
with excess mortality ?initiate prompt
appropriate adequate therapy - Pathogens distinct from one hospital to another,
specific sites within the hospital, and from one
time period to another - Avoid overuse of antibiotics, focus on accurate
diagnosis, tailor therapy to recognized pathogen
and shorten duration of therapy to the minimum
effective period - Apply prevention strategies aimed at modifiable
risk factors
8Suppurative Lung Disease
- Lung Abscess
- Bronchiectasis
- Empyema
9Lung Abscess
- Localized collection of pus in the lung
parenchyma surrounded by a fibrous tissue wall. - Single or Multiple
- Necrotizing pneumonia may simulate an abscess
it lacks a wall - May precede lung abscess development
10Classification
- Primary Lung Abscess (Usually single)
- Occurs in healthy individuals, e.g. following
aspiration, pneumonia (cavitation) - Secondary Abscess (May be multiple)
- Pre-existing lung disease, e.g. Bronchogenic
cancer, COPD, lung cysts etc - Systemic Immunosuppression
- Metastatic (eg. Infective endocarditis)
11Factors contributing to thedevelopment of lung
abscess
- 1. Oral cavity disease
- Periodontal disease
- Gingivitis
- 2. Altered consciousness
- Alcoholism Coma
- Drug abuse Anesthesia
- Seizures
- 3. Immunocompromise
- Steroid therapy
- Chemotherapy
- Malnutrition
- Multiple trauma
- 4. Esophageal disease
- Achalasia
- Reflux disease
- Esophageal obstruction
- 5. Bronchial obstruction
- Tumor
- Foreign body
- Stricture
- 6. Generalized sepsis
12Pathogenesis
- Aspiration of infectious material
- i. Poor oro-dental hygiene (infected gums,
tonsils, etc) - ii. Predisposition to aspiration Dysphagia,
Alcoholism, seizure, stroke, trauma,
unconsciousness - Colonization of organisms in the lung.
- Cellular infiltration and exudation
- Local liquefaction necrosis, destruction
- Bronchial communication, air in the abscess
cavity. - May extend to pleural cavity - pyopneumothorax
- Repair mechanisms and fibrosis - containment
13Microorganisms responsible for lung abscess
- 1. Aerobic Klebsiella, Pseudomonas
- Staphylococci,
others - Anaerobic Bacteroides, Clostridia
- Fungal Aspergillus
- Mycobacterial
- Parasitic Entamoeba
- Echinococcus
(Hydatid Cyst)
14Clinical Features
- Symptoms
- - Acute or insidious onset
- - Fever with rigors, night sweats, Chest pain/
dullness, Cough, Sputum production - (Sputum is large volume, thick, muco-purulent or
purulent blood stained, foul smelling) - Signs
- - Presence of per/sidontal disease, other
risk-factor - - Febrile, toxic patient, Finger clubbing
- Chest exam
- - May be normal.
- - Localized impairment of percussion note
- - Breath sounds diminished bronchial breathing,
egophony, Crackles
15Differential diagnosis (cavitary lung lesion)
- 1. Cavitating lung cancer
- 2. Localized empyema
- 3. Infected bulla containing a fluid level
- 4. Infected bronchogenic cyst or sequestration
- 5. Pulmonary hematoma
- 6. Cavitating
- pneumoconiosis
- 7. Hiatus hernia
- 8. Lung parasites (e.g. hydatid cyst, Paragonimus
infection) - 9. Actinomycosis
- 10. Wegeners granulomatosis and other
vasculitides - 11. Cavitating lung infarcts
- 12. Cavitating sarcoidosis
16Investigations
- Polymorphonuclear leukocytosis
- Sputum examination Smear and culture for
different etiological agents - Chest radiography CXR, CT scans
- Bronchoscopy for bronchial assessment
(Obstruction, ulceration etc) br secretions for
microbiology
17Radiographic findings
- CXR
- - Smooth or irregularly walled cavity, fluid
level dependent part commonly. - - Klebsiella abscess mostly in upper lobe,
bulging fissure sign. - - Staph abscesses Multiple, sometimes thin
walled - CT scans
- Clear demonstration of wall, localization of site
within the lung, pleural communication - - presence of empyema other underlying lung
problem. - - CT is also helpful for guidance for
per-cutaneous aspiration
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21(No Transcript)
22 Pulmonary Samples For
Microbiological Demonstration (Uncontaminated)
- Transtracheal aspirate
- Transthoracic pulmonary aspirate
- Fiberoptic bronchoscopy with protected specimen
brush - Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid for quantitative
culture - Surgical specimens
- Pleural fluid (if empyema present)
23Lemierres Syndrome
- Rare cause of lung abscesses
- Infection with anaerobe
- (F. necrophorum)
- Cl Features
- - Sore throat, fever, rigors, neck-swelling,
hemoptysis, dyspnea - - Thrombophlebitis thrombosis of neck veins,
- - Metastatic spread to other organs.
24Complications
- Erosion/ rupture Broncho-pleural fistula and
empyema formation - Spread into surroundings
- Metastatic spread Brain, Liver, Spleen
- Sepsis
- Long-term sequelae Bronchiectasis, Fibrosis
- Systemic
amyloidosis
25Management
- General measures
- Antibiotic therapy parenteral
- Aspiration pn. Co-amoxiclav
- Metronidazole
- Staphylococcal
- CA-MSSA Oral co-amoxilav
- CA-MRSA Clindamycin, Linezolid,
Vancomycin etc - Surgical management
26Bronchiectasis
- Definition
- Permanent destructive dilatation of the bronchi
(following infection, destruction and fibrosis) - Types
- Cystic
- Cylindrical
- Localized or diffuse
27(No Transcript)
28Etiology of bronchiectasis
- Post-infectious, e.g. tuberculosis, pneumonia
childhood infection such as measles, mumps,
whooping cough - Connective tissue diseases, e.g. SLE, rheum
arthritis, Sjögrens syndrome, relapsing
polychondritis - Secondary to inhalation or aspiration, e.g.
a foreign body - Inflammatory bowel disease, e.g. ulcerative
colitis - Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
- Immune deficiency e.g. Secondary to ch lymphatic
leukemia
29Congenital causes of Bronchiectasis
- Cystic fibrosis
- Ciliary defects, e.g. primary ciliary dyskinesia,
Youngs syndrome - Kartageners syndrome
- Immune deficiency, e.g. IgA deficiency,
- X-linked agammaglobulinemia,
- Common variable immunodeficiency
- Congenital defects e.g. tracheobronchomegaly
(Mounier-Kuhn syndrome), pulmonary sequestration
30Clinical Features
- Chronic cough and expectoration
- Sputum Purulent/ muco-purulent, foul-smelling,
large volume, thick and tenacious - Haemoptysis, sometimes massive
- Recurrent exacerbations
- SIGNS - General malnutrition, pallor, edema
- - Digital clubbing,
osteoarthropathy - Chest
- - Depends on site and extent of involvement
- - If large, signs of lung volume reduction
- - May be areas of bronchial breathing
- - Coarse crepitations, Occasional rhonchi
31Investigations
- General Anemia, Hypoglobulinemia
- Chest radiography CXR, CT scan (HRCT)
- Bronchography
- Sputum examination For exacerbations.
- - AFB to exclude TB, if suspected
- Smear for culture
- - ECG, ECHO for cardiac evaluation in suspected
chronic cor-pulmonale
32Differential Diagnosis
- Pulmonary tuberculosis
- Cystic fibrosis
- COPD
- Allergic broncho-pulmonary aspergillosis
- Interstitial lung diseases
- Eosinophilic lung diseases
- Hypersensitivity pneumonias
33Radiological features
- CXR
- May appear normal in early, limited disease,
left lower lobe hidden behind the heart in PA
film. - Thickened bronchial lines- tram lines
- Cystic shadows/ cavities with fluid levels
- HRCT
- Almost diagnostic.
- Clear demonstration of site of involvement,
- Type of lesions, surrounding lung parenchyma,
focal pneumonitis, areas of atelectasis. - Clue to the underlying etiology (eg ABPA)
34(No Transcript)
35(No Transcript)
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38Complications
- Recurrent pneumonias
- Recurrent hemoptysis, sometimes massive
- Local lung destruction and cavitation
- Aspergilloma formation (fungal ball) in a cavity
- Metastatic spread
- Pulmonary hypertension and chronic cor pulmonale
- Chronic malnutrition
- Amyloidosis
- Chronic respiratory failure if extensive lung
destruction and fibrosi
39Management
- Bronchial hygiene Postural drainage, Chest
physiotherapy - Antibiotics for infections
- Expectorant and mucolytics
- Management of complications, e.g hemoptyis,
pulmonary hypertension (Chronic or pulmonale),
respiratory failure - Nutritional supplementation
- Surgical management - Resection, if localized
- -
Management of hemoptysis - - Lung
transplantation -
-
40Recommendation for antibiotics use
- Bacterial infection
First choice Second
line - Haemophilus influenzae
Doxycycline, - or Moraxella catarrhalis
Co-amoxiclav ciprofloxacin - Streptococcus pneumoniae
Amoxicillin
Clarithromycin - MRSA
Rifampicin and Rifampicin
and -
trimethoprim
doxycycline or -
or IV vancomycin
linezolid -
or teicoplanin - Ps aeruginosa
Ciprofloxacin Ceftazidime -
and tobramycin -
or colistin
41Prevention of infections
- Preventive vaccinations
- Bronchial hygiene measures
- - Chest physiotherapy
- - Nebulization/steam inhalation
- - Respiratory muscle exercises
- Long term antibiotic use - Oral
-
Nebulized
42Kartageners Syndrome
- Ciliary dyskinesia i.e. abnormal ciliary
movements - Genetic abnormality
- Clinical features
- - Bronchiectasis
- - Situs inversus, dextrocardia
- - Chronic sinusitis
- - Infertility
43Allergic Broncho Pulmonary Aspergillosis
- Hypersensitivity to aspergillus in the
tracheo-bronchial tree in patients with chronic
asthma. - Clinical Features Severe attacks, sputum
production hard brown plugs hemoptysis - Radiology CXR and HRCT Fleeting opacities,
typical patterns bronchiectasis proximal
bronchi - Diagnosis Skin test Immediate delayed ve
- Sputum for aspergillus ve
- Serology ve Total Asperg
specific IgE levels - Treatment Anti-inflammatory drugs (steroids),
- Anti-biotics, anti-fungals
44(No Transcript)
45Cystic Fibrosis
- A common condition in Caucasians 1 in 2500 live
births - Genetic anomaly Autosomal recessive mutation on
chromosome 7 leads to protein Cystic Fibrosis
Transmembrane Regulator, CFTR) abnormality - Clinical Features Multi-organ problem
- Bronchiectasis thick viscid sputum
- Pancreatic insufficiency - diarrhoea
- Liver disease biliary cirrhosis
- Sweat glands function abnormality
- Infertility
- Low bone mass
-
46THANK YOU