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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 pulmonary 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
General Microscopic Description:

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

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. W.B. Saunders Philadelphia 1994. pp.694-698.