Monografia (especialização)
Estudo clínico laboratorial das pneumonias pós-infecções virais
Fecha
2012-05-10Autor
Ana Flávia de Oliveira Aquino
Institución
Resumen
Pneumonia is an infectious and inflammatory disorder that settles in the lungs and is
caused by the penetration of infectious agents or irritants in the alveolar space. The
respiratory system has defense mechanisms such as immune response and
mechanical actions to ensure the sterility of the lower airways, preventing bacterial
invasion. When these mechanisms are not efficient host cannot contain the bacterial
invasion occurs and onset of the disease. Some factors favor the occurrence of
pneumonia as aging, smoking, heart failure, oropharyngeal colonization, micro and
macroaspiration, alcoholism, immunosuppression, and viral infections. Patients with
weakened immune system by viral infections are more likely to suffer secondary
bacterial infection. The viral infection causes cell destruction and sloughing of superficial
tissues of the respiratory system, increase susceptibility to bacterial superinfection of
patients for the loss of ciliary clearance process, the dysfunction of phagocytic cells
which reduces the effectiveness of cleansing the respiratory tract. The main causative
organism of bacterial pneumonia is Streptococcus pneumoniae is responsible for 20-
60% of cases of bacterial pneumonia in the community. The challenge is the diagnostic
identification of the pathogen, which causes, in most cases, the diagnosis is basei only
in clinical diagnosis making the antimicrobial therapy is often not optimal. The
microbiological diagnosis is essential to identify the pathogen and the correct conduct
for treatment. The characteristics that allow identification of S. pneumoniae are alpha
hemolysis on blood agar, optochin sensitivity, and Bili solubility. Besides the
identification of the pathogen is imperative that it be carried out to identify the antibiotic
susceptibility profile to antimicrobials.