Title: Chlamydia Pneumonia in Atypical Pneumonia
1Chlamydia Pneumonia in Atypical Pneumonia
2Atypical Pneumonia
- Lower respiratory tract infections due to
specific respiratory pathogens - Chlamydia psittaci (psittacosis),
- Francisella tularensis (tularemia),
- Coxiella burnetii (Q fever),
- Chlamydia pneumoniae,
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae
- Legionella species
- Newly recognized causes of CAP
- Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS),
- Hantavirus
- Avian influenza,
- ? Viral CAPs
Zoonotic
Nonzoonotic
Clin Microbiol Infect 2006 12 (Suppl. 3) 1224
3Atypical Pneumonia
- 15 of all CAPs, mostly sporadic, more common
than typical bacterial pathogens in mild or
ambulatory CAP in adults. - As a cause of Nursing home-acquired pneumonia
(NHAP) or Nosocomial pneumonia (NP) - ? Rare
- Main feature differentiating atypical from
typical CAP pathogens - Presence of extrapulmonary findings
Clin Microbiol Infect 2006 12 (Suppl. 3) 1224
4Prevalence of atypical respiratory pathogens in
patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP)
Eur Respir J 2004 24 171181
5Clin Microbiol Infect 2006 12 (Suppl. 3) 1224
6Clin Microbiol Infect 2006 12 (Suppl. 3) 1224
7-- URI involvement -- Ear signs, laryngitis,
non-exudative pharyngitis
HRlt120 w/ BT39.4?
Clin Microbiol Infect 2006 12 (Suppl. 3) 1224
8M. pneumoniae and C. pneumoniae
9Features of C. pneumoniae
- G(-) Obligate intracellular bacteria? Require a
different therapeutic approach - Constitute the majority of CAPs in young adults
in the ambulatory or outpatient settings - Potential role in coronary artery disease and
multiple sclerosis, also associated with acute
airway hypersensitivity (AE of asthma and COPD)
10Diagnosis of Chlamydia Pneumonia
- Clinical laboratory methods for identification of
C. pneumoniae are suboptimal - Poor correlation between serology and culture
and/or PCR - It is rare to definitively establish a diagnosis
of C. pneumoniae in the clinical setting?
Treatment is most often on an empirical basis
11Diagnostic Modalities
- Culture requires nasopharyngeal swabs
- Antibody tests (complement fixation and
microimmunofluorescence) - Direct antigen detection (direct
immunofluorescence DFA and enzyme immunoassay
EIA) - Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
12Lab Diagnosis of C. pneumoniae
- MIF? detect IgG, IgM, and IgA
- Acute infection? fourfold rise in IgG titer, a
single IgM titer gt16,or a single IgG titer gt512.
- Past or preexisting infection 16ltIgG titerlt512
- PCR
- Rapid identification, sensitive
- Limited to test antimicrobial susceptibility, not
provide an isolate
- Pediatric Pulmonology 36384390 (2003) UpTodate
13Thank you for the attention!