Bacteremic pneumococcal pneumonia in the elderly
- PMID: 6486161
- DOI: 10.1097/00000441-198410000-00004
Bacteremic pneumococcal pneumonia in the elderly
Abstract
Pneumococcal pneumonia is an increasingly important disorder of the elderly. We reviewed, retrospectively, the clinical and laboratory manifestations of 29 elderly patients with bacteremic pneumococcal pneumonia during a five year period and surveyed the capsular serotypes of all blood isolates. Pneumococcal pneumonia frequently presented with subtle manifestations in these elderly patients: 50% lacked historical features suggestive of pneumonia at the time of diagnosis. A common presentation was fever, altered mental status and dehydration. Recognizing this will allow earlier diagnosis and initiation of therapy. Sixty percent of patients had potential pulmonary pathogens other than pneumococcus in cultures of sputum at the time of pneumococcal bacteremia. Reversible abnormalities of liver function were frequent. Sixty-nine percent of pneumonias were caused by serotypes included in the commercially available vaccine. Continued surveillance of pneumococcal serotypes is important to determine if the widespread use of the vaccine will result in an increased incidence of infection by serotypes which are not in the vaccine. The high mortality associated with pneumococcal pneumonia (31% in this series), particularly in the elderly, emphasizes the need for an effective vaccine.
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