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Lobar (croupous) pneumonia: old and new data

BACKGROUND AND AIM: Pneumonia remains one of the most frequent death causes worldwide. Among the etiological factors S. pneumoniae-causing lobar pneumonia plays a leading role. According to current textbook knowledge at least three sequential stages of lobar pneumonia are distinguished: congestion,...

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Autores principales: Zinserling, Vsevolod A., Swistunov, Vladimir V., Botvinkin, Alexander D., Stepanenko, Lilia A., Makarova, Angelica E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8409273/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34472009
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s15010-021-01689-4
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author Zinserling, Vsevolod A.
Swistunov, Vladimir V.
Botvinkin, Alexander D.
Stepanenko, Lilia A.
Makarova, Angelica E.
author_facet Zinserling, Vsevolod A.
Swistunov, Vladimir V.
Botvinkin, Alexander D.
Stepanenko, Lilia A.
Makarova, Angelica E.
author_sort Zinserling, Vsevolod A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIM: Pneumonia remains one of the most frequent death causes worldwide. Among the etiological factors S. pneumoniae-causing lobar pneumonia plays a leading role. According to current textbook knowledge at least three sequential stages of lobar pneumonia are distinguished: congestion, red hepatization and gray hepatization. However, there are no detailed data supporting this stage concept. There are also controversial views on its etiology. In this study, the lung changes in lobar pneumonia were related to the cause and duration of the disease. In addition, the complications of the disease were evaluated. PCR studies verified the etiology of pneumonia. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Lobar pneumonia was analyzed in 252 post mortem cases examined in a large hospital in Irkutsk. The pathology, etiology of pneumonia, course of disease and cause of death were recorded and correlated to its clinical course and duration. In the second part of the study, the results in 95 patients were analyzed in detail and related to PCR findings. RESULTS: Most patients were adult men of low social status who showed signs of severe alcoholism. Lobar pneumonia was observed in 85% of the patients, while the remaining patients showed sublobar (“lobular”, focal) lung involvement. Histologically, three patterns of inflammation were observed, which in most patients occurred concurrently in different parts of the involved lobe: “congestion”, characterized by serous exudation with multiple cocci (41% of cases), “red hepatization” (41% of cases) and “gray hepatization” (100% of cases). The latter pattern was subdivided into three subgroups according to the ratio of fibrin—neutrophils and the presence of macrophages. The mean number of different histological patterns observed per patient was 3.8. There was no correlation between the inflammatory patterns and the duration of the disease. In 23% of the patients, the cause of death was of pulmonary origin, while the remaining patients died of extrapulmonary complications (i.e. acute heart failure 26%, acute vascular insufficiency 15% purulent meningitis 11–24.3%. In 29/95 patients (20 with lobar and 9 with focal pneumonia) pneumococcal etiology of pneumonia was established by PCR. CONCLUSION: Lobar pneumonia is a distinct clinico-pathological entity caused by S. pneumoniae, demonstrated by PCR testing and/or cytological examinations. Bacteriologic studies frequently give falsenegative results. Lobar pneumonia is characterized by three main histopathological patterns (congestion or microbeous edema, and red and gray hepatization) which usually occur side by side and not in chronological order. Early death is often related to heart failure and septic shock, while meningitis is a frequent complication later in the course.
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spelling pubmed-84092732021-09-01 Lobar (croupous) pneumonia: old and new data Zinserling, Vsevolod A. Swistunov, Vladimir V. Botvinkin, Alexander D. Stepanenko, Lilia A. Makarova, Angelica E. Infection Original Paper BACKGROUND AND AIM: Pneumonia remains one of the most frequent death causes worldwide. Among the etiological factors S. pneumoniae-causing lobar pneumonia plays a leading role. According to current textbook knowledge at least three sequential stages of lobar pneumonia are distinguished: congestion, red hepatization and gray hepatization. However, there are no detailed data supporting this stage concept. There are also controversial views on its etiology. In this study, the lung changes in lobar pneumonia were related to the cause and duration of the disease. In addition, the complications of the disease were evaluated. PCR studies verified the etiology of pneumonia. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Lobar pneumonia was analyzed in 252 post mortem cases examined in a large hospital in Irkutsk. The pathology, etiology of pneumonia, course of disease and cause of death were recorded and correlated to its clinical course and duration. In the second part of the study, the results in 95 patients were analyzed in detail and related to PCR findings. RESULTS: Most patients were adult men of low social status who showed signs of severe alcoholism. Lobar pneumonia was observed in 85% of the patients, while the remaining patients showed sublobar (“lobular”, focal) lung involvement. Histologically, three patterns of inflammation were observed, which in most patients occurred concurrently in different parts of the involved lobe: “congestion”, characterized by serous exudation with multiple cocci (41% of cases), “red hepatization” (41% of cases) and “gray hepatization” (100% of cases). The latter pattern was subdivided into three subgroups according to the ratio of fibrin—neutrophils and the presence of macrophages. The mean number of different histological patterns observed per patient was 3.8. There was no correlation between the inflammatory patterns and the duration of the disease. In 23% of the patients, the cause of death was of pulmonary origin, while the remaining patients died of extrapulmonary complications (i.e. acute heart failure 26%, acute vascular insufficiency 15% purulent meningitis 11–24.3%. In 29/95 patients (20 with lobar and 9 with focal pneumonia) pneumococcal etiology of pneumonia was established by PCR. CONCLUSION: Lobar pneumonia is a distinct clinico-pathological entity caused by S. pneumoniae, demonstrated by PCR testing and/or cytological examinations. Bacteriologic studies frequently give falsenegative results. Lobar pneumonia is characterized by three main histopathological patterns (congestion or microbeous edema, and red and gray hepatization) which usually occur side by side and not in chronological order. Early death is often related to heart failure and septic shock, while meningitis is a frequent complication later in the course. Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2021-09-01 2022 /pmc/articles/PMC8409273/ /pubmed/34472009 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s15010-021-01689-4 Text en © Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2021 This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Zinserling, Vsevolod A.
Swistunov, Vladimir V.
Botvinkin, Alexander D.
Stepanenko, Lilia A.
Makarova, Angelica E.
Lobar (croupous) pneumonia: old and new data
title Lobar (croupous) pneumonia: old and new data
title_full Lobar (croupous) pneumonia: old and new data
title_fullStr Lobar (croupous) pneumonia: old and new data
title_full_unstemmed Lobar (croupous) pneumonia: old and new data
title_short Lobar (croupous) pneumonia: old and new data
title_sort lobar (croupous) pneumonia: old and new data
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8409273/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34472009
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s15010-021-01689-4
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