Surgical Critical Care: Pulmonary Aspiration
Pulmonary Aspiration
Definitions
- Aspiration: Entry of Material into the Larynx & Lower Respiratory Tract
- Includes Oropharyngeal Contents (Food/Drink) or Gastric Contents
- Aspiration (Chemical) Pneumonitis – Inflammatory Reaction in the Lower Airways
- Independent of Infection
- Mediated by Inflammatory Cytokines (TNF-α & IL-8)
- Mendelson’s Syndrome – Aspiration Pneumonitis that Occurs During Anesthesia, Especially During Pregnancy
- Aspiration (Bacterial) Pneumonia – Active Bacterial Infection
- Most Common Site: Superior Segment of Right Lower Lobe (RLL)
Risk Factors
- Dysphagia
- Head, Neck & Esophageal Tumors
- Esophageal Structure
- Esophageal Motility Disorders
- COPD
- Seizures
- Degenerative Neurologic Disease (Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson’s Disease, Dementia)
- Altered Mental Status
- Stroke
- Antipsychotic Medication
- Cardiac Arrest
Diagnosis
- Primary a Clinical Diagnosis (Based on Clinical History, Exam & Chest X-Ray)
- Bronchoalveolar Lavage (BAL) May Be Used to Distinguish Pneumonia from Pneumonitis
Treatment
- Mild-Moderate Cases: Supportive Therapy & Reassess After 48 Hours
- Aspiration Pneumonitis Itself Does Not Require Antibiotic Therapy
- Even if Radiographic Infiltrate Present
- Severe Cases: Empiric ABX
- *Bronchoscopy Not Routinely Required Unless There was a Large-Volume Witnessed Aspiration