Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEdith Osborne Modified over 9 years ago
1
THE LUNG By Dr Raana Akhtar
5
PULMONARY INFECTIONS URTI PNEUMONIA Impaired local defence mechanisms. - loss of cough reflex,defective mucociliary action,secretions in airways,interference with phagocytosis&pulmonary edema. Decreased resistance of the host. Chronic diseases,immunologic deficiency, immunosuppressive agents and leucopenia.
6
PNEUMONIA COMMUNITY ACQUIRED ACUTE PNEUMONIA COMMUNITY ACQUIRED ATYPICAL PNEUMONIA HOSPITAL ACQUIRED PNEUMONIA ASPIRATION PNEUMONIA CHRONIC PNEUMONIA NECROTIZING PNEUMONIA &LUNG ABSCESS PNEUMONIA IN IMMUNOCOMPROMISED HOST
7
COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED ACUTE PNEUMONIAS Streptococcus pnemoniae- gram positive Haemophilus influenzae-gram negative Moraxella catarrhalis Staphlococcus aureus Klebsiella pneumonia Pseudomonas aeruginosa Legionella pneumophila
8
PNEUMONIA MORPHOLOGY Lobar pneumonia Bronchopneumonia Four Stages Of Inflammatory Response CONGESTION RED HEPATIZATION GREY HEPATIZATION RESOLUTION PLEURITIS
9
SYMPTOMS OF PNEUMONIAS
10
COMPLICATIONS OF PNEUMONIA ABSCESS FORMATION EMPYEMA BACTEREMIC DISSEMINATION: Metastatic abscesses,endocarditis,meningitis and suppurative arthritis.
11
BRONCHOPNEUMONIA
15
LOBAR PNEUMONIA
17
COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED ATYPICAL PNEUMONIA Mycoplasma pneumoniae Chlamydia sppc Coxiella burnetti Viruses: Respiratory Syncytial virus Parainfluenza virus Influenza A&B Adenovirus SARS virus
18
COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED ATYPICAL PNEUMONIA PATHOGENESIS Attachment of the organism to URT epithelium Necrosis of cells and an Inflammatory response Extends to alveoli,interstitial inflammation Damage to epithelium Inhibit mucociliary clearance Secondary becterial infections
19
COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED ATYPICAL PNEUMONIA Morphology Patchy or lobar Unilateral or bilateral Redblue and congested Interstitial inflammation within the walls of alveoli Alveolar septa widened and edematous Mononuclear infammatory infiltrate of lymphocytes,macrophages and plasma cells Intra-alveolar proteinaceous material&cellular exudate
20
Viral pneumonia with interstitial lymphocytic infiltrate.s
21
HOSPITAL- ACQUIRED PNEUMONIA Enterobacteriaceae Pseudomonas S.aureus
22
ASPIRATION PNEUMONIA Unconscious patients Repeated vomiting Partly chemical pneumonia(gastric acid) Bacterial pneumonia(oral flora) Aerobes and anaerobes Necrotizing pneumonia Fulminating clinical course Lung abscess is a common complication
23
ASPIRATION PNEUMONIA
25
LUNG ABSCESS LOCAL SUPPURATIVE PROCESS WITHIN THE LUNG characterized by NECROSIS OF LUNG TISSUE. Etiology & Pathogenesis Streptococci, S.aureus,gram negative organisms.anaerobic organisms in oral cavity Bacteroides,Fusobacterium and Peptococcus species in 60% cases.
26
LUNG ABSCESS Aspiration of infective material Post-pneumonic abscess formatio Septic embolism Neoplasia(post-obstructive) Miscellaneous: spread of infection from neighboring organ, hematogenous seeding Primary Cryptogenic Lung abscesses
27
LUNG ABSCESS MORPHOLOGY Few mm to large cavities of 5 to6 cm Single,on right side due to aspiration Multiple,basal due to pneumonia,septic emboli Suppurative debri in abscess cavity Continued infection,large greenblack multiloculated cavities with poorly demarcated margins(gangrene of the lung) SUPPURATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LUNG PARENCHYMA with CENTRAL AREA OF CAVITATION Fibrous wall in chronic cases
28
LUNG ABSCESS
30
CHRONIC PNEUMONIAS Inflammatory reaction is granulomatous caused by Bacteria (M.tuberculosis) Fungi(Histoplasma capsulatum, Blastomyces dermatitidis, Coccidiodes immitis)
31
Histoplasmosis Histoplasma capsulatum infection Acquired by inhalation of dust particles from soil contaminated with bird or bat dropings containing spores Intracellular parasite of macrophages Apical coin lesions on X-ray chest Cough, fever &night sweats Extrapulmonary localized lesion in mediastinum,adrenals,liver and meninges
32
Histoplasmosis Macrophages (TNF) Helper T-cells(INF gamma) Morphology Epitheloid cell granulomata with caseous necrosis Large areas of consolidation may liquify to form cavities Lesions undergo fibrosis and concentric calcification(tree- bark appearance) 3 to 5 micron meter thin walled yeast may persist in tissues for years. Fulminating Disseminated Histoplasmosis. Macrophages filled with fungal yeast.
33
BLASTOMYCOSIS Blastomyces dermatitidis Pulmonary,Disseminted& Primary cutaneous Consolidation,multilobar infiltrates,perihilar infiltrates or miliary infiltrates. Suppurative granulomas 5 to15-micron meter yeast cells
34
Coccidioidomycosis Inhalation of spores of Coccidioides immitis Lung lesions in 10%. Granulomatous lesions Nonbudding sperules filled with small endospores within macrophages and giant cells
35
Chronic abscessing inflammation
36
TB LUNG
37
Pulmonary disease in HIV infection
38
Pneumocystis carinii jirovesi
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.