Necrotizing Pneumonia (NP)
- Necrotizing pneumonia – rare and severe complication of bacterial CAP
- Lies on a spectrum between lung abscess and pulmonary gangrene
- Characterized by pulmonary inflammation with consolidation, peripheral necrosis + multiple small cavities
- Compromise of bronchial and pulmonary Vascular supply
- Pulmonary gangrene is the final stage if the necrotising pneumonia progresses uncontrollably
- Characterised by sloughing of a pulmonary segment/lobe
Etiology
- Staphylococcus aureus – particularly in young immunocompetent patients
- Pneumococcus
- Klebsiella pneumoniae
- Pseudomonas
- Haemophilus influenzae
Clinical features
- Initially, typical symptoms of pneumonia
- Systemic signs as disease progresses
- Night sweats, weight loss, anaemia
- Patient presents in hospital severely ill ± sepsis, with rapid clinical deterioration
- Can show signs of septic shock
- May need ventilator support
Pathogenesis
- Simple lung abscess should drain spontaneously via the closest bronchus
- NP has micro-abscesses, patchy inflammation with lack of perfusion
- As the tissue undergoes liquifactive necrosis – the multiple small abscesses can coalesce to form larger cavities
- Can progress to pulmonary gangrene
Diagnosis
- Sputum + blood cultures – to identify causative pathogen(s)
- CXR
- Pts have more significant parenchymal disease, involving multiple lobes
- Bulging fissures due to inflammatory exudation
- CT thorax
- Multiple small cavities <1cm
- Normal architecture of lung is lost
Treatment
- Early empirical antibiotics
- Supportive measures – oxygen, fluids
- Similar antibiotics to CAP – clarithromycin, co-amoxiclav, amoxicillin
- Pneumococcal vaccination
Pulmonary Gangrene (can be difficult to distinguish from NP)
- NP progresses to more severe parenchymal destruction, and eventually pulmonary gangrene (PG)
- In contrast to simple lung abscess or necrotising pneumonia, PG has
- Greater extent of necrosis
- Obliteration or thrombosis of bronchial arteries (end arteritis obliterans)
- Bronchial obstruction
- In contrast to simple lung abscess, cavities in PG can lack the fibrous capsule