Lung abscess: Difference between revisions

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m (Text replacement - "Rhodococcus equi" to "Rhodococcus hoagii")
 
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*Usually polymicrobial, including oral [[anaerobes]]
 
*Usually polymicrobial, including oral [[anaerobes]]
*Can also be monomicrobial, caused by ''[[Klebsiella]]'', ''[[Staphylococcus aureus]]'', ''[[Pseudomonas aeruginosa]]'', ''[[Burkholderia pseudomallei]]'' (melioidosis), ''[[Pasteurella multocida]]'', ''[[Streptococcus pyogenes]]'', ''[[Haemophilus influenzae]]'' types b and c, [[Legionella species|''Legionella'']], ''[[Rhodococcus equi]]'', [[Actinomyces species|''Actinomyces'']], and [[Nocardia species|''Nocardia'']]
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*Can also be monomicrobial, caused by ''[[Klebsiella]]'', ''[[Staphylococcus aureus]]'', ''[[Pseudomonas aeruginosa]]'', ''[[Burkholderia pseudomallei]]'' (melioidosis), ''[[Pasteurella multocida]]'', ''[[Streptococcus pyogenes]]'', ''[[Haemophilus influenzae]]'' types b and c, [[Legionella species|''Legionella'']], ''[[Rhodococcus hoagii]]'', [[Actinomyces species|''Actinomyces'']], and [[Nocardia species|''Nocardia'']]
   
 
===Pathophysiology===
 
===Pathophysiology===

Latest revision as of 12:49, 31 August 2022

Background

Microbiology

Pathophysiology

  • Mostly from chronic aspiration

Risk Factors

Clinical Presentation

  • Cough, fever, night sweats
  • Anaerobes more likely to be involved when symptoms are subacute or indolent (lasting longer than 2 weeks)

Differential Diagnosis

Investigations

  • Routine investigations: CT chest, sputum for Gram stain (though may not grow anaerobes), blood cultures
  • If easy to obstain, can consider transtracheal aspirates, transthoracic needle aspirates, and pleural fluid culture
  • If diagnosis is uncertain, bronchoscopy

Diagnosis

  • Usually made based on CT chest plus compatible symptoms

Management

  • Unless clearly monomicrobial, should treat broadly and include good anaerobic coverage
  • Duration depends on clinical and radiographic response
    • As short as 3 weeks, but usually up to 6 to 8 weeks
    • Can follow progress radiographically, continuing until chest x-ray shows small, stable residual lesion or is clear
  • Rarely requires surgical intervention for lobectomy or pneumonectomy
    • Indicated in failure of medical management, suspected neoplasm, or hemorrhage
    • May also be indicated if slow response with obstructed bronchus, large abscess (>6 cm diameter), or resistant organisms (such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa)
    • If poor surgical candidate, can consider endoscopic or percutaneous drainage