Hospital-acquired pneumonia: etiologic considerations

Abstract
The development of pneumonia requires the pathogen to reach the alveoli and the host defenses to be overwhelmed, either by microorganism virulence or by inoculums size. The endogenous sources of microorganisms are nasal carriers, sinusitis, mouth, oropharynx, gastric, or tracheal colonization, and hematogenous spread. The exogenous sources of microorganisms are biofilm of the tracheal tube, ventilator circuits, nebulizers, and humidifiers. Health care workers may also play a role in this setting. Different microorganisms can be found depending on the onset time of pneumonia and on the local pattern variation encountered between different institutions and countries. Healthy patients may be chronically colonized. A very important, unresolved issue is the definition of early and late-onset pneumonia; it still remains uncertain from the literature whether the given threshold refers to the number of days in hospital or to the number of days following intubation. Noninvasive ventilation is demonstrating that the term "ventilator-associated pneumonia" is perhaps inaccurate and should be referred to as "intubation-associated pneumonia."

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