Pulm| Pneumonia: Lobar, Broncho, and Interstitial - podcast episode cover

Pulm| Pneumonia: Lobar, Broncho, and Interstitial

Mar 04, 20235 minSeason 2Ep. 21
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Episode description

2.21 Pneumonia: Lobar, Broncho, and Interstitial

Pulmonary system review for the USMLE Step 1 Exam

  • Pneumonia is an infection of the lung parenchyma that deals with gas exchange
  • Three classic patterns of pneumonia: lobar, bronchopneumonia, and interstitial pneumonia
  • Lobar pneumonia involves a single lobe of the lung and has four stages: congestion, red hepatization, gray hepatization, and resolution
  • Most commonly associated with strep pneumoniae, also caused by Legionella and Klebsiella
  • Bronchopneumonia is an infection of the bronchi that leads to diffuse infection of adjacent alveoli
  • Causative organisms include strep pneumoniae, klebsiella, H influenza, and staph aureus
  • Interstitial pneumonia is an ongoing infection in the interstitial areas of alveolar walls
  • Causative organisms tend to be different compared to other types of pneumonia and include Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Legionella, chlamydophilia bugs, Coxiella burnetti, and some viruses (influenza and RSV)
  • On chest X-ray, lobar pneumonia shows haziness in a single lobe with sharp demarcation, while bronchopneumonia and interstitial pneumonia show more diffuse haziness throughout the lungs
  • Interstitial pneumonia tends to be more indolent, and patients may have not so good looking lungs on chest X-ray but are up and walking around (walking pneumonia).
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