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Bronchopneumonia (Cut surfaces)
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Bronchopneumonia (Cut surfaces)

This is a view of the sliced surface of the right lung with lobes identified as (U)pper, (M)iddle, and (L)ower.
The pale tan regions of parenchyma are normal.
The reddish brown regions of parenchyma are consolidated and contain hemorrhage and neutrophils.
The patchy distribution is characteristic of broncho- pneumonia as opposed to diffuse involvement of the lobe in lobar pneumonia.
(Description By:Melinda Sanders, M.D. )
(Image Contrib. by: Hartford Hospital )
Bronchopneumonia
Etiology

Variety of aspirated organisms.
Organism dependent on whether community acquired in previously healthy patient (more likely Streptococcus) or
Community acquired in patient with depressed pulmonary defenses such as a patient with chronic bronchitis (more likely Klebsiella or Pseudomonas spps) or
Hospital acquired
Pathogenesis

Aspiration of organisms results in inflammation and necrosis of underlying parenchyma
Tends to scar if alveolar septae are destroyed,
Epidemiology

Common in hospitalized patients and contributes to the cause of death in moribund patients
Most common community acquired pneumonia as well
General Gross Description

Patchy distribution particularly around small airways
Nodular, elevated, firm, airless regions
Range from red to gray depending on age of the lesion
Can become confluent to mimic lobar pneumonia
General Microscopic Description

Bronchocentric lesions
Neutrophils fill airway and surrounding alveoli
Parenchymal destruction depends on organism
Uninvolved parenchyma may contain acellular pink edema
Clinical Correlation

Clinical course dependent on underlying disease processes
Patients present with fever, cough and purulent sputum
References

Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th edition. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 694-698.
Bronchopneumonia
Synopsis by: Melinda Sanders M.D. (T28000M40000)[122]
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