Name the following difference between typical and atypical community acquired penumonia (CAP):
Speed of Onset
TYPICAL
rapid onset (acute)
ATYPICAL
gradual onset over days-to-weeks (insidious)
(constitutional symptoms predominate over respiratory ones)
Name the following difference between typical and atypical community acquired penumonia (CAP):
Symptoms
TYPICAL
fever, chills
productive cough, with PMNs seen in sputum
ATYPICAL
low-grade fever (100-101 F, ~38 C)
nagging cough, often not productive
Name the following difference between typical and atypical community acquired penumonia (CAP):
Gram stain
TYPICAL
may have a positive blood culture with agents visible in Gram staining
ATYPICAL
patients are ambulatory (contributes to definition of “walking pneumonia”), no gram stain
Name the following difference between typical and atypical community acquired penumonia (CAP):
Responsible Agents (most common = more important)
TYPICAL
Associated agents:
Strep pneumoniae
Staph aureus (especially after the flu)
Gram negative opportunistic pathogens:
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Enterobacter
Viruses:
H. influenza (typically type b)
Adenovirus (in acute resp. syndrome)
ATYPICAL
Associated agents: all have ATYPICAL cell walls, and can be recognized because they don’t Gram stain
Endemic mycoses:
How does the xray of atypical CAP appear compared to the symptoms?
CXR may show greater involvement than expected from physical symptoms
Define Walking Pneumonia
A type of pneumonia caused by mycoplasmas, with symptoms similar to but milder than those of bacterial or viral pneumonia. It spreads easily and typically affects school-age children and adults under 40.
Describe the properties of Chlamydiae organisms
i.e. genome size, gram stain, cell wall, etc
Name the two developmental forms of Chlamydia
Describe some of their properties
How does Chlamydia spread and cause infection (at the cellular level).
Describe the developmental cycle of Chlamydia
(Hint) Stages at 0, 8, 24, 30, and 35-40 hrs
Name some examples of disease types Chlamydia can cause and which species is responsible for each
(Hint: 4 general types, 3 species)
Give some examples of diseases Chlamydia may cause along with their causative species
What is psittacosis and what causes it?
Why are Chlamydia and mycoplasma considered atypical organisms?
What are the two most common species of Chlamydia that cause respiratory disease?
Describe the distribution and frequency in pulmonary disease of C. pneumoniae. How is it spread, does it have an animal reservoir?
Describe the spread of C. psittaci, who is at risk, who harbors this bacteria?
Describe the unique properties of Mycoplasma species and describe their cellular features
Describe the growth requirements of mycoplasma (growth as in a lab or on an agar plate). Do they take up gram stains? Why are they so sticky?
What are the species of mycoplasma that typically cause human disease?
How do we try and diagnose Mycoplasma infection? What tests are available?
What is the cold agglutinin test? Is it specific?
How do we test for chlamydia infections? What labs do we look for?
What is Bordetella pertussis? What are its virulence factors and bacteriologic traits? (i.e. gram - or +, general shape)