Atypical pneumonia

Background

Clinical Features

  • Gradual onset (days) vs abrupt in typical pneumonia
  • Dry, nonproductive cough (early — may become productive later)
  • Prominent extrapulmonary symptoms: headache, myalgias, arthralgias, malaise, pharyngitis
  • Low-grade fever
  • Exam may be less impressive than CXR findings (walking pneumonia)
  • Organism-specific clues:
    • Mycoplasma: Young adults, bullous myringitis, erythema multiforme, cold agglutinins
    • Legionella: Older adults, smokers; diarrhea, hyponatremia, relative bradycardia, elevated LFTs
    • Chlamydophila: Hoarseness, biphasic illness (pharyngitis → pneumonia)

Differential Diagnosis

Causes of Pneumonia

Bacteria


Viral


Fungal


Parasitic

Evaluation

  • CXR: patchy infiltrates, often bilateral; may show diffuse interstitial pattern
  • Labs: CBC, BMP, procalcitonin
  • Legionella urinary antigen (only detects serogroup 1 — covers ~70% of cases)
  • Consider Mycoplasma IgM if diagnosis unclear
  • Severity scoring: CURB-65 or PSI to guide disposition

Management

  • Empiric coverage for atypicals included in standard CAP regimens per guidelines:
    • Outpatient (healthy, no comorbidities): Azithromycin or doxycycline monotherapy
    • Outpatient (comorbidities): Respiratory fluoroquinolone (levofloxacin or moxifloxacin) OR beta-lactam + macrolide
    • Inpatient: Beta-lactam + macrolide OR respiratory fluoroquinolone
  • See community acquired pneumonia for detailed antibiotic dosing via templates

Disposition

  • Per CURB-65 or clinical judgment
  • Most atypical pneumonias are mild and managed outpatient

See Also

References