Back to Journal

SM Journal of Pulmonary Medicine

Modern View of Acute Pneumonia and Forgotten Achievements of Medical Science

[ ISSN : 2574-240X ]

Abstract Letter to the Editor References
Details

Received: 13-Jul-2018

Accepted: 16-Jul-2018

Published: 17-Jul-2018

Igor Klepikov*

Department of Pediatric Surgery, Renton, USA

Corresponding Author:

Igor Klepikov, Department of Pediatric Surgery, Renton, Washington, USA, Tel: (425)264-5841; Email: iklepikov@yahoo.com

Abstract

Acute pneumonia is known to medicine for more than two and a half millennium since the time of Hippocrates. All known old classic postulate that pneumonia is not contagious infection. And today, patients with acute pneumonia are not subjected to isolation and other precautions. Moreover, it is well known that the etiology of pneumonia is quite diverse. The causative agents of pneumonia are very numerous, are not a constant feature of the disease and, as a rule, belong to the representatives of symbiotic nonspecific micro flora.

Letter to the Editor

Acute pneumonia is known to medicine for more than two and a half millennium since the time of Hippocrates. All known old classic postulate that pneumonia is not contagious infection. And today, patients with acute pneumonia are not subjected to isolation and other precautions. Moreover, it is well known that the etiology of pneumonia is quite diverse.

The causative agents of pneumonia are very numerous, are not a constant feature of the disease and, as a rule, belong to the representatives of symbiotic nonspecific micro flora. However, despite such a long history of fame, modern ideas about the nature of acute pneumonia look very primitive and paradoxical, especially against the background of outstanding achievements of medical science in many areas related to pulmonology.

The concept of causes and mechanisms of development of any disease determines both the nature of medical care for these patients and the final results of treatment. Acute pneumonia is no exception to this rule. Modern ideas about the nature of acute pneumonia dictate the direction and specificity of the necessary assistance to these patients. And the paradox of modern ideas about the nature of pneumonia is as follows. Today, all efforts in the treatment of this group of patients are aimed primarily at the suppression of the microbial factor.

Considering the current recommendations for the treatment of acute pneumonia, we can assume that we are talking about dangerous and severe mono infection. Another important argument for this assessment is vaccination against pneumonia. This pneumococcal vaccination has a specific focus and does not cover many other etiological options. Vaccination has forced to forget about many hazardous infections and is guaranteed protection from being infected by them. However, a mass campaign of vaccination against pneumonia did not lead to the desired revolutionary results. Moreover, contrary to expectations, against the background of pneumococcal vaccination of the population of developed countries, a statistically significant increase in purulent complications of acute pneumonia was registered [1-3].

This unexpected result of vaccination does not fit into the modern understanding of the nature of acute pneumonia as an infectious process with a clear predominance of one of the pathogens. Therefore, experts and scientific analysts were not ready for a reasoned explanation of this unpleasant “surprise”. Currently, the initial treatment of acute pneumonia is defined as “antibiotics alone”. The use of the same antibiotics in inflammatory diseases of different localization and pathogenesis is generally accepted. Thus, treatment (especially initial) of completely different diseases is equivalent. It should be noted that today in developed countries, the majority of patients with acute pneumonia are still treated on an outpatient basis with the help of “antibiotics alone”.

However, the etiology of pneumonia in such cases remains unknown. The problem begins to manifest itself in those observations where the initial treatment failed and the patient needs hospitalization. As a rule, such situation is explained by the presence of superaggressive micro flora without presenting convincing evidence. At the same time, all additional treatments for patients with acute pneumonia, which begin to be used in the case of hospitalization, are not strictly specific. The use of such methods is based only on subjective assumptions about their beneficial effect on patients with acute pneumonia, but their actual impact on the dynamics of the inflammatory process in the lungs, has not passed due objective testing.

For example: why patients with acute pneumonia in the early hours of the disease should receive intravenous fluids? What catastrophic fluid loss can occur during this period of illness? What really lies behind the so-called term “intoxication”? But we know that the first barrier to which the injectable intravenous solutions reach is the area of inflammation in the lung, don’t we? In other words, this procedure increases blood flow to the area of progressive inflammatory edema and infiltration of tissues.

Another example: Why a small focus of acute inflammation in the lung can cause severe violations of gas exchange and we must give for patients the insufflation of oxygen? Why atelectasis of the lobe and even the entire lung usually does not give such heavy changes of respiration? These known differences suggest that the volume of functioning pulmonary parenchyma is not the main cause of gas exchange shifts and there is another unaccounted mechanism of these disorders. Such issues require, first of all, a review of views on the nature and mechanisms of acute pneumonia. In this regard, it is necessary to recall the following well-known axioms and facts of medical science.

1. Acute pneumonia is not contagious specific disease and its etiology is represented by non-specific bacteries that are usually found among the symbionts of healthy people. Patients with acute pneumonia do not require isolation or other epidemiological measures.

2. The body’s response to any stimulus, including the initiation of inflammation, is highly individual and unique.

3. The basis for the inflammatory transformation of the body tissue is a vascular reaction with a specific stage sequence.

4. Small and large circles of blood circulation have not only a direct anatomical connection, but also an inverse functional interdependence.

5. The vessels of the lesser circulation are highly sensitive reflexogenic zone.

6. Among the nonspecific forms of inflammation, acute pneumonia is the only process occurring in the system of lesser circulation.

7. Any acute inflammation is accompanied by five classical signs, which were described several centuries ago by Celsus and Galen (heat, pain, redness, swelling, and loss of function). Depending on the localization of the process, the fifth sign (loss of function) is the most important as it determines the clinical manifestation and severity of the disease.

The information mentioned above is well known to everyone since the time of the University bench. Taking this information into account is important not only to understand the mechanisms of the disease, but also to explain many manifestations of acute pneumonia, which still cause difficulties in their interpretation. At the same time, it remains a mystery that such important materials remain unclaimed in justifying and determining the complex of care for patients with acute pneumonia.

The above-mentioned classical facts of medical science formed the basis of the new doctrine of acute pneumonia. Additional studies were conducted to clarify certain elements of the pathogenesis of the disease. All additional analyses were based on representative material and subjected to statistical processing.

This work has been done and tested in a clinical setting in the years 1976-1984 in Novokuznetsk State Institute for postgraduate doctors (USSR, Russia).Following private studies were additionally performed.

1. Experimental model of AP (4 series of experiments, 44 animals) obtaining a model of pleural complications (certificate for invention No 1631574, A1, 1 November 1990, USSR).

2. X-ray examination 56 lung anatomical preparations with different forms of the AP, taken from the dead patients.

3. Record comparative rheopulmonography before and after performing medical procedures (36 patients).

4. Analysis of the observation and treatment of 994 children with AP and its various destructive and pleural complications.

The main result of this work was the creation of a new doctrine of acute pneumonia and on its basis the revision of the principles of medical care for these patients. The revised recommendations for treatment were applied in 101 patients in the initial period of aggressive forms of АP, as well as in 102 patients who at the time of hospitalization already had effusion in the pleural cavity. The received results allow speaking about possibility of the guaranteed prevention of suppurative and destructive complications of the disease.

The summary of the work and its parts were published only in Russian [4]. Unfortunately, the conclusions and recommendations of the research have not received proper dissemination and application among Russian-speaking professionals. The past years have shown that the problem of prevention of purulent and destructive complications of acute pneumonia has not only remained unresolved, but also aggravated by the appearance of additional causes. Against the background of a gradual decrease in the effectiveness of antibiotics and the constant replenishment of the group of antibiotic-resistant strains of microorganisms, the treatment strategy of OP has not undergone any radical changes .

Over the past two decades, there has been an increase in the number of purulent complications of OP. The expected triumph of vaccination against pneumonia has not taken place. However, despite the changes and dynamics among the causative agents of acute pneumonia, the nature and mechanisms of inflammation in the lung remain dependent on the General biological laws.

This rule is an integral characteristic of each nosological form. Therefore, successfully tested strategic approaches to the treatment of acute pneumonia should be of interest to specialists in various fields that come into contact with this problem. To this end, the results of previous studies and clinical trials were translated into English and published last year as a separate book [5]. The details of the studies that are described in this book, combined with the classical principles of biology give an idea of the unique mechanisms of development of acute pneumonia and existing methods of influence on them in the direction of stimulation and inhibition.

The submissions supported by objective testing, statistical processing, and results of clinical approbation of the Contents of the book gives a realistic idea about the possibility of guaranteed prevention of purulent-destructive complications of the disease and is the basis for further work in this direction.

References

1. Li S-TT, Tancredi DJ. Empyema Hospitalizations Increased in US Children Despite Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine. Pediatrics. 2010: 125: 26-33.

2. Roxanne E Strachan, Thomas L Snelling, Adam Jaffe. Increased pediatric hospitalizations for empyema in Australia after introduction of the 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine. Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 2013; 91: 167-173.

3. Grijalva CG, Nuorti JP, Zhu Y, Griffin MR. Increasing incidence of empyema complicating childhood community-acquired pneumonia in the United States. Clin Infect Dis. 2010; 50: 805-813.

4. Klepikov I. Acute pneumonia and its’ purulent-destructive complications in children in conditions of large industrial center of Western Siberia. Author’s summary of Doctor’s Abstracts. Saint-Petersburg. 1989.

5. Igor Klepikov. Acute pneumonia: a new look at the old problem. Lambert Acadamic publishing,2017.

Citation

Klepikov I. Modern View of Acute Pneumonia and Forgotten Achievements of Medical Science. SM J Pulm Med. 2018; 4(1): 1029.

Other Articles

Article Image 1

The Overview of the Clinical Significance of Interferon-Gamma Release Assays for the Diagnosis of Tuberculosis

Due to lack of the practical application guidelines for Interferon-Gamma Release Assays (IGRAs), the testing result of IGRAs may be misinterpreted in clinical practice in China. Therefore, we clarify some important issues related to IGRAs based on the available evidences in this review. The available data reveals that IGRAs can be used to assist the diagnosis of Latent TB Infection (LTBI) and combined with HIV infection; while for the definite diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring of active TB have no value. In addition, IGRAs showed no better performance than TST in low income countries. It should make practical guidelines to TB diagnostic tools and further strengthen the training and guide for the clinicians the low income countries, so as to more scientifically manage TB.

Yulu Gao¹#, Shencong Mei²#, Jun Wang⁴#, Zhonghua Liu⁶, Qinyun Li³, Zongshuai Gao³, Changtai Zhu³,⁶, and Yongning Sun⁵


Article Image 1

Obesity and Breathing Related Sleep Disorders: Concise Clinical Review

The increasing prevalence of obesity has lead to an increase in the prevalence of sleep disordered breathing in the general population. Obesity is a serious disorder resulting in significant health impairment. Obese adults are at increased risk of morbidity and mortality from acute and chronic medical conditions. Obesity is associated with anatomic alterations that predispose to upper airway obstruction during sleep. Obesity and sleep related breathing disorders occur to a particular subgroup that includes obese patients with hypoventilation correlated with Hypercapnic-OSA (obstructive sleep apnea), Hypercapnic-OSA with OHS (hypoventilation syndrome) and OHS without OSA.

OHS is a disease entity distinct from simple obesity and OSA. OSA is a common disorder. Obesity and particularly central adiposity are potent risk factors for OSA. They can increase pharyngeal collapsibility through mechanical effects on pharyngeal soft tissues and lung volume, and through central nervous system–acting signaling proteins (adipokines) that may affect airway neuromuscular control. Specific molecular signaling pathways encode differences in the distribution and metabolic activity of adipose tissue.

The OHS is characterized by the combination of obesity (BMI>30 kg/m2 ), daytime awake hypercapnia and hypoxemia , in the presence of sleep-disordered breathing without other known causes of hypoventilation, such as severe obstructive or restrictive parenchymal lung disease, kyphoscoliosis, severe hypothyroidism, neuromuscular disease, and congenital central hypoventilation syndrome. It is estimated that 90% of patients with OHS also have OSA. Patients with OSA typically have normal control of breathing and obesity is not a necessary condition; patients with OHS are morbidly obese, have hypoventilation during wakefulness with increased arterial PCO2 and decreased arterial PO2 , as well as nocturnal hypoventilation. The gold standard for the diagnosis is monitored polysomnography during sleep. In stable hypercapnic patients therapeutic choice will depend on two factors: underlying diagnosis (presence or absence of OSA) and severity of hypercapnia.

Ines Maria Grazia Piroddi¹, Sofia Karamichali², Cornelius Barlascini³, and Antonello Nicolini¹*


Article Image 1

Tracheal Diverticulosis Presenting as Chronic Cough

A 62 year old female patient with mild intermittent asthma was seen in the pulmonary clinic with a history of a productive cough for two years. She had required multiple courses of antibiotics over the past year. She underwent a CT scan of the chest which showed central bronchiectasis and multiple discrete diverticula projecting posteriorly from the membranous trachea measuring up to 2.3 x 1.7 x 1.7 cm.  The diverticula involved nearly the entire course of the trachea (Figure 1). A bronchoscopy was performed which showed tracheal pouches and indentations (Figure 2). There were no prior scans and therefore it is unclear for how long she had the diverticula. Her symptoms improved with antibiotics and she remains relatively well with chest physiotherapy and bronchial hygiene.

Humam Farah¹*, Parth Parikh¹, Michael Bukstein¹, and Ruxana T Sadikot²,³


Article Image 1

Emphyema Due to Hepatic Abscess

A 36 year-old man with previous biliary surgery due to pancreatitis with pseudo cyst formation five years earlier, had one week of right upper-quadrant pain. Although the pain was pleuritic, he had no respiratory symptoms and a normal chest radiograph.

Joseph R Shiber¹* and David Skarupa²


Article Image 1

Primary Soft-Tissue Nocardial Abscess with a Complication of Severe Pneumonia: A Case Report and Literature Review

Although very rare, nocardiosis is considered as an important opportunistic infection, especially in immunocompromised patients with long-term corticosteroid use or organ transplantation. Lung and skin involvements are frequent, but primary soft-tissue nocardiosis is very rare. Herein, we described a 48 year-old Chinese man with a primary soft-tissue nocardial abscess caused by multidrug-resistant nocardia asteroides, which was sensitive only to imipenem and resistant to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and other antibiotics like amikacin and vancomycin.An initial treatment with a combination of surgical drainage and imipenem was conducted, but a secondary severe pneumonia was complicated two weeks later. Then, the antimicrobial regimen was shifted to sulbactam sodium/cefoperazone and itraconazole injection for the severe pneumonia. For nocardiosis, drainage was continued and minocycline was administered instead of imipenem for maintenance therapy for 9 months. Eventually, the patient recovered well from the primary soft-tissue nocardial abscess and the secondary severe pneumonia. To our knowledge, this is the first case with a combination of primary softtissue nocardial abscess, multidrug-resistant nocardia asteroides and complication of severe pneumonia.

Shufang Zhang¹#, Feifei Zhou²#, Xiuhui Lin³, Liuhong Wang⁴, Wei Cui³, and Gensheng Zhang³*


Article Image 1

Superior Vena Cava Obstruction in Lung Carcinoma

We report a case of Pancoast tumor with Superior vena cava obstruction and thoracic outlet syndrome in 60 year old patient who has been diagnosed to have undifferentiated lung carcinoma on evaluation. Patient was a chronic smoker from 40 years on treatment for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and presented with hoarseness of voice, puffiness of face, pain in right arm and chest.

Chest radiography and computerized tomography of thorax showed homogenous density in right upper lobe extending in to superior mediastinum with involvement of multiple groups of lymphnodes. CT guided biopsy confirmed diagnosis of undifferentiated large cell carcinoma. Patient developed clinical features of superior vena caval obstruction in a period of 15 days.

Sreenivasa Rao Sudulagunta¹*, Shyamala Krishnaswamy Kothandapani², and Mahesh Babu Sodalagunta³


Article Image 1

The Role of Lung Function and the Importance to Measure Small Airways Modifications

Normally in clinical practice the evaluation of lung pathophysiology follows a functional and mechanical evaluation primarily through spirometry and plethysmography. The Small Airways (SAW) are one of the most important targets for respiratory diseases and various studies underline their strict relations with chronic diseases like asthma or COPD, although it is nowadays recognized their role in a lot of other pathological entities. The evaluation of SAW is not always easy and often more than one functional test must be done. So, the possibility to known the “scenario” of available functional respiratory tests, both in clinical and research setting, represents a central point in the respiratory world. Moreover the correct interpretation of the lung function tests is necessary not only to better evaluate the actual clinical status of the respiratory disorders but also to allow the appropriate therapeutic choice. The aim of the current review is to direct the readers attention to the importance of lung function evaluation and its specific role both in clinical and research setting.

Dejan Radovanovic¹,², Giovanni Marchese², and Pierachille Santus¹,²*


Article Image 1

Saber Sheath Trachea: Functional and Clinical Correlations

Saber sheath trachea refers to diffuse coronal narrowing of the intra-thoracic portion of the trachea with concomitant widening of the sagittal diameter. It is considered to be widely associated with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). The diagnosis is based on the calculation of the tracheal index which is the ratio of coronal to sagittal length in the axial plane measured 1cm above the upper margin of the aortic arch. Saber sheath trachea is considered to be present when the tracheal index is less than 0.67. The tracheal index has been associated with severity of obstruction and most notably with hyperinflation and extent of emphysema in COPD patients. Thus, it can have clinical importance. The presence of saber sheath trachea and its clinical implications should be further explored in COPD as well as in other diseases in which emphysema represents a major component, as Combined Pulmonary Fibrosis Emphysema (CPFE).

Vasilios Tzilas¹ and Demosthenes Bouros¹*


Article Image 1

Impact of Poor Glycemic Control on Severity and Clinical Course of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease in Patients with Co-Existing Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus - One Year Prospective Study

Background: Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (DM) are common and under diagnosed chronic non-communicable medical conditions in India. The escalating epidemic of DM is a great challenge for the clinicians treating COPD as large number of patients have Poor Glycemic Control (PGC). We undertook this trial to study the influence of PGC on severity and disease outcome in COPD subjects with concomitant DM.

Materials and methods: COPD patients either known or newly diagnosed DM cases as per WHO criteria were enrolled in the study and grouped into patients with PGC and Optimal Glycemic Control (OGC) based on HbA1c measurements. Subjects were closely monitored for 1 year.

Results: Of the 490 subjects analyzed, 336 (68.57%) had PGC and 154 (31.43%) had OGC. COPD patients with PGC had more severe disease compared to OGC (Mean FEV1% predicted 48.47 ± 13.7 vs 67.4 ± 13.86, p= 0.0061) and also DOSE score (4.35 ± 1.88 vs 3.18 ± 2.30 p= 0.0052) at the baseline. After 1 year, patients with PGC had statistically significant high rates of exacerbations. The mean DOSE scores were statistically greater in PGC patients after 12 months suggesting worsening of COPD symptoms and quality of life. Hospitalization was significantly frequent and longer in PGC patients. (6.56 ± 1.70 vs 4.16 ± 1.26 p= 0.0004).

Conclusion: Patients with PGC had more severe COPD, poor lung function, high symptom score, and increased risk of exacerbations with frequent and prolonged hospitalizations.

Vinay Mahishale*, Ajith Eti, Bhagyashri Patil, Mitchelle Lolly, and Sujeer Khan


Article Image 1

Use of Telehealth Data in Multidisciplinary Team Review of COPD

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a significant illness that lends itself well to telehealth – the remote monitoring of patients at home. Currently, COPD telehealth is usually led by community nurses. Given the multifaceted needs of patients with COPD, we argued that a Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) approach is a better way of holistically managing patients on telehealth. We present our experience of working as part of a community MDT to review patients already undergoing COPD telemonitoring. We collected data on the MDT activity during a six months period with the aim of highlighting deviations from best practice. The MDT prospectively reviewed 95 patients and issued 141 recommendations which were fed to the patient’s usual General Practitioner (GP) or directly implemented by the telehealth staff. We concluded that a multidisciplinary review of COPD telehealth patients is feasible and has the potential to add value to what is largely a technology-led service.

Ghassan A Hamad¹*, Michael Crooks², and Alyn H Morice³