Aspiration Pneumonitis vs Aspiration Pneumonia
|
Feature |
Aspiration Pneumonitis |
Aspiration Pneumonia |
|
Basic definition |
Acute chemical lung injury caused by inhalation of sterile gastric contents |
Infectious pneumonia due to aspiration of oropharyngeal secretions colonized with bacteria |
|
Nature of process |
Chemical / inflammatory (non-infectious initially) |
Infectious (bacterial) |
|
Primary insult |
Gastric acid (low pH), bile salts, enzymes, food particles |
Pathogenic bacteria from oral cavity |
|
Sterility at onset |
Sterile at onset |
Non-sterile from onset |
|
Common clinical scenario |
Witnessed aspiration during: anesthesia induction, overdose, alcohol intoxication, seizures, head injury |
Chronic micro-aspiration in: stroke, dementia, poor oral hygiene, alcoholism |
|
Aspiration event |
Usually witnessed and large-volume |
Often unwitnessed, recurrent micro-aspiration |
|
Time course of symptoms |
Abrupt onset (minutes to hours) |
Insidious onset (days) |
|
Latency after aspiration |
Symptoms within 1–6 hours |
Symptoms appear 24–72 hours or later |
|
Fever |
Absent or low-grade initially |
Common, persistent |
|
Cough |
Acute cough, choking episode |
Productive cough common |
|
Sputum |
Usually minimal or absent |
Purulent, foul-smelling sputum |
|
Dyspnea |
Prominent and sudden |
Progressive |
|
Hypoxemia |
Severe, early |
Moderate, progressive |
|
Tachypnea |
Common |
Common |
|
Chest pain |
Rare |
Possible pleuritic pain |
|
Systemic toxicity |
Minimal initially |
Prominent (sepsis features common) |
|
Inflammatory markers (CRP, PCT) |
Mild or normal early |
Elevated |
|
Leukocyte count |
Normal or mild leukocytosis |
Marked leukocytosis |
|
Arterial blood gas |
Acute hypoxemic respiratory failure |
Hypoxemia ± respiratory alkalosis/acidosis |
|
Radiological onset |
Rapid (within hours) |
Delayed |
|
Chest X-ray pattern |
Patchy, bilateral or dependent infiltrates |
Lobar or segmental consolidation |
|
Typical lobes involved (upright) |
Right lower lobe |
Right lower lobe |
|
Typical lobes involved (supine) |
Posterior segments of upper lobes, superior segments of lower lobes |
Same |
|
CT chest findings |
Ground-glass opacities, dependent consolidation |
Consolidation ± cavitation |
|
Cavitation |
Rare |
Common (anaerobes) |
|
Lung abscess |
No |
Yes |
|
Empyema |
Rare |
Possible |
|
Bronchiectasis (chronic) |
No |
Can develop |
|
Pathophysiology – key mechanism |
Acid causes epithelial injury → ↑ permeability → alveolar flooding → ARDS |
Bacterial infection → inflammation → necrosis |
|
pH of aspirate relevance |
pH < 2.5 strongly injurious |
Less relevant |
|
Volume relevance |
> 0.3 mL/kg high risk |
Small repeated volumes sufficient |
|
Common organisms |
None initially |
Anaerobes (Prevotella, Fusobacterium), Streptococcus, Gram-negative bacilli |
|
Role of anaerobes |
None |
Major role |
|
Blood cultures |
Negative |
May be positive |
|
Sputum culture |
Non-diagnostic |
Useful |
|
BAL findings |
Neutrophilic inflammation, sterile cultures |
Positive bacterial cultures |
|
Progression |
May resolve in 24–48 h or progress to ARDS |
Progressive without antibiotics |
|
ARDS risk |
High |
Lower |
|
Sepsis risk |
Low initially |
High |
|
Natural course without antibiotics |
Often improves spontaneously |
Worsens |
|
Mainstay of treatment |
Supportive care only |
Antibiotics essential |
|
Antibiotics role |
NOT indicated initially |
Indicated |
|
When antibiotics may be started |
If no improvement after 48–72 h or secondary infection suspected |
From diagnosis |
|
Preferred antibiotics |
None initially |
Beta-lactam/beta-lactamase inhibitor (e.g., amoxicillin-clavulanate, piperacillin-tazobactam) |
|
Anaerobic coverage |
Not required |
Required |
|
Steroids |
Not routinely recommended |
Not routine |
|
Oxygen therapy |
Frequently required |
Often required |
|
Mechanical ventilation |
Common in severe cases |
Less common |
|
Outcome |
Good with supportive care |
Good with appropriate antibiotics |
|
Mortality |
Related to ARDS severity |
Related to sepsis, comorbidities |
|
Prevention strategies |
Aspiration precautions peri-intubation |
Oral hygiene, swallowing assessment |

