How can pneumonia be classified?
Pneumonia can be classified according to etiology, location acquired, clinical features, and the area of the lung affected by the pathology.
Differentiate petween primary and secondary pneumonia.
Primary pneumonia: no apparent preexisting conditions that may predispose to pneumonia
Secondary pneumonia
Bronchial asthma, COPD, heart failure, cystic fibrosis
Viral upper respiratory tract infections with bacterial superinfection
Anatomical abnormalities such as tubercular caverns, bronchial tumors, or stenosis (postobstructive pneumonia) [9]
Aspiration pneumonia
Differentiate between community-, hospital- and healthcare-asscoated pneumonia.
Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP): pneumonia that is acquired outside of a healthcare establishment
Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP): nosocomial pneumonia, with onset > 48 hours after admission
Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP): pneumonia occurring in patients who are on mechanical ventilation breathing machines in hospitals (typically in the intensive care unit)
Healthcare-associated pneumonia (HCAP): pneumonia that is acquired in healthcare facilities (e.g., hospital, nursing homes, hemodialysis centers, and outpatient clinics); this terminology is no longer recommended but is included for historical purposes.
Differentiate between typical and atypical pneumonia.
Typical pneumonia
Pneumonia featuring classic symptoms (typical findings on auscultation and percussion)
Manifests as lobar pneumonia or bronchopneumonia
Atypical pneumonia
Pneumonia with less distinct classical symptoms and often unremarkable findings on auscultation and percussion
Manifests as interstitial pneumonia
List and describte different types of pneumonias according to the area of lung affected.
Lobar pneumonia: pneumonia affecting one lobe of a lung
Multilobar pneumonia refers to the involvement of multiple lobes in a single lung or both lungs.
Panlobar pneumonia involves all the lobes of a single lung.
Bronchial pneumonia: pneumonia affecting the tissue around the bronchi and/or bronchioles
Interstitial pneumonia: pneumonia affecting the tissue between the alveoli
Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (formerly known as bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia): a noninfectious pneumonia of unknown etiology characterized by the involvement of the bronchioles, alveoli, and surrounding tissue
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