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

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Although there remains some difference of opinion as to the relation of influenza to pneumonia, the majority of observers concur in regarding pneumonia as a complication and this would seem to be the only logical interpretation of the facts available. The same may be said with respect to purulent bronchitis and bronchiectasis. It is of considerable significance in this connection that pneumonia following influenza presents no uniform clinical picture, no uniform bacteriology and no uniform pathology. Whether the predisposition of patients with influenza to contract pneumonia is preponderantly due to lowering of general resistance to infection by the extremely prostrating effect of the disease and the inhibition of leucocytic defense, or to a destruction of local resistance against bacterial invasion by reason of profound injury to the bronchial mucosa, or to a combination of both factors, is difficult to say. It seems most probable that both are concerned. At any rate it seems clear that in the presence of influenza a considerable variety of organisms which under ordinary conditions do not find lodgement in the lungs are able to gain access to the lower respiratory tract and produce pneumonia.

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