Читать книгу Epidemic Respiratory Disease. The pneumonias and other infections of the repiratory tract accompanying influenza and measles онлайн

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Clinical Features.

The advent of superimposed hemolytic streptococcus infection of the lower respiratory tract during the course of pneumococcus pneumonia following influenza presented no clinical features that made diagnosis certain without bacteriologic examination. The sudden occurrence of a pleural exudate during the course of the disease seemed of particular significance, especially since empyema in the bronchopneumonias following influenza was exceedingly rare in the absence of hemolytic streptococcus infection. Other suggestive symptoms were a chill during the course of the disease, a sudden turn for the worse in cases apparently doing well, or the development of a cherry red cyanosis. None of these features, however, was sufficiently constant or distinctive of streptococcus invasion to be depended upon and when they occurred, were merely indications for further bacteriologic examination.

Bacillus Influenzæ Pneumonia Following Influenza

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Bacteriologic evidence that cases of pneumonia following influenza might be due to B. influenzæ alone was very meager in the group of cases studied clinically at Camp Pike; in fact, no convincing evidence was obtained that such cases occurred. In one case B. influenzæ alone was found in the sputum coughed from the deeper air passages, and in another case B. influenzæ with a few colonies of S. viridans was found. Both were cases of bronchopneumonia, mild in character, and recovered promptly. They presented no clinical features by which they could be distinguished from cases of pneumococcus bronchopneumonia.

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