LeCount[[68]] says: “The pneumonia of influenza is commonly referred to as bronchopneumonia. It may be so designated, but it differs from other bronchopneumonias in its predilection for the periphery of the lungs and in the extent to which the inflammation is hemorrhagic.”
MacCallum[[69]] states that the following types of pneumonia following influenza may be recognized. 1. Pneumococcus pneumonia. The lobular character of the consolidation is in these cases well marked, although it tends to lose its definiteness through the confluence of adjacent areas. The cut surface of the lung shows in the more acute cases a peculiar lobular or confluent consolidation which corresponds well with what is commonly written of the stage of engorgement in the description of lobar pneumonia. Later stages in the pneumonia show within these areas patches of rough gray consolidated tissue from which definite plugs of exudate project. 2. Staphylococcal pneumonia. 3. Streptococcal pneumonia. There is lobular pneumonia, the interlobular septa are edematous and, microscopically, bronchi and alveoli are loaded with streptococci. Whole areas of lung, though retaining their form, are entirely necrotic. Lymphatics are distended with exudate containing streptococci in great numbers, but in none of these cases is interstitial bronchopneumonia found. 4. Pneumonia produced by B. influenzæ of Pfeiffer. The lung is studded with palpable shot-like grayish yellow nodules; the bronchi exude thick yellow pus, which contains influenza bacilli. Microscopically, the walls of the bronchi are found to be thickened by mononuclear infiltration and new formation of connective tissue. The walls of the alveoli are thickened and indurated and the alveoli often contain fibrin in process of organization. Absence of conspicuous changes in lymphatics, absence of intense pleural infection and relatively scant numbers of polynuclear leucocytes in the exudate within the alveoli and bronchial walls are, MacCallum states, all that distinguish this pulmonary change from the interstitial bronchopneumonia caused by the hemolytic streptococcus and described by him in previous papers.
Lyon[[70]] designates the pulmonary lesion following influenza, hemorrhagic pneumonitis, the lung tissue containing serous fluid loaded with red blood corpuscles; in many instances there was such scant consolidation that the process could not be regarded as a true pneumonia. In 35 instances the lesion was lobular in distribution and in 16 instances was sufficiently extensive to be designated lobar, but it was not typical lobar pneumonia, and, often associated with lobular patches of consolidation, appeared to be a confluent lobular pneumonia.
Goodpasture and Burnett[[71]] say: “The difficulties of analyzing the pulmonary lesions in any group of influenza pneumonias as they have appeared in this epidemic, are very apparent to anyone who has had an opportunity to observe the bacteriology and pathology of this accompaniment of the disease.” There is an acute outflow of the fluid elements of the blood and of hemorrhage into the lung tissue filling the alveoli in lobular areas and not infrequently in an entire lobe. By a special method of staining these authors have studied the distribution of Gram-negative bacilli with the morphology of B. influenzæ. The fact that in certain very early cases demonstrable bacteria of any kind are scarce or not found at all, has lead them to believe “notwithstanding the demonstration of influenza bacilli in pure culture in the lung in all but one instance, that at this stage organisms are comparatively few within the alveoli, and the primary injury is due to a very potent toxic agent elaborated in and disseminated through the larger air passages. In the later stages or from the beginning, if the injury be slight, the infection focalizes about the bronchi or their terminations, so that the bronchial and lobular distribution becomes very conspicuous.” Typical lobar pneumonia with “croupous” exudate within the alveoli occurs in cases complicated by secondary pneumococcus infection.
Wolbach[[72]] has found that two types of pneumonia are characteristic of influenza. In cases in which death has occurred within a few days after onset of pulmonary signs, the lung tissue is dark red and “meaty in consistency” and contains abundant blood-tinged serous fluid which drips from the cut surface. The other type of lesion is found in patients who have lived for ten days or more after onset of the disease; there is extensive bronchitis, bronchopneumonia, discrete or confluent, and peribronchitis. The lungs are voluminous and the smaller bronchi are distended. Microscopically, there is peribronchitis with extensive infiltration of the interlobular septa and organization in alveoli and bronchioles. This lesion is that designated by MacCallum as “interstitial bronchopneumonia.” Wolbach thinks that the two types of lesion represent different stages of the same process. He regards as distinctive of the pneumonias of influenza the presence of hyalin fibrin lining distended air spaces. With the two types of lesion which have been described, B. influenzæ was the only organism which could be cultivated, and the author associates these distinctive conditions with that microorganism.
Streptococcus Pneumonia.—Finkler emphasized the importance of streptococcus pneumonia as a complication of influenza. In 1888 he described instances of acute primary streptococcus pneumonia observed in 1887 and 1889. This form of pneumonia, Finkler thought, occurred in Bonn in epidemic form before the influenza epidemic of 1889–90 and, he states, exhibited an astonishing similarity to the pneumonia of influenza. He thought that later there was in Bonn a mixed infection of influenza and primary streptococcus pneumonia. In one type of streptococcus pneumonia, described by Finkler, there was lobular consolidation which in multiple patches produced “pseudolobar” consolidation; the consolidated lung was smooth and red, and similar to spleen, rather than hepatized. In another group of instances the lesion merited the name “erysipelas of the lung.” The lesion was an acute interstitial pneumonia in some places, a cellular or occasionally fibrinous pneumonia with involvement of the interstitial tissue in other places. There was edematous swelling and accumulation of leucocytes in the interstices between the alveoli and about the blood vessels and bronchi. Finkler stated that the similarity to erysipelas might suggest that the lymphatics contain streptococci, but this relation did not exist although large lymphatic channels were occasionally filled with coagulum. He asserted that the disease was contagious and cited cases which he believed had their origin in hospital wards.
The widespread occurrence of streptococcus pneumonia in the army camps in this country attracted attention during the first months of 1918. Cummings, Spruit and Lynch[[73]] at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, recognized the prevalence of streptococcus pneumonia, both as a complication of measles and in association with lobar pneumonia, and showed that the microorganism concerned was a hemolytic streptococcus. In 7 autopsies upon individuals with lobar pneumonia, they found pneumococcus alone in 2 instances and pneumococcus and hemolytic streptococcus or hemolytic streptococcus alone in 5 instances. Hemolytic streptococcus was found in all of 24 instances of bronchopneumonia, three-fourths of which followed measles. They recommend the bacteriologic examination of the throat of patients with measles and the segregation of those who harbor hemolytic streptococci.
Cole and MacCallum[[74]] have published almost simultaneously, with that just cited, a report upon the pneumonia which has occurred at Fort Sam Houston and have shown the importance of hemolytic streptococci in its causation. They have found two varieties of pneumonia, namely, acute lobar pneumonia which does not differ essentially from that which occurs elsewhere and bronchopneumonia which in most cases has followed measles and is caused by S. hemolyticus. They think this infection is usually acquired in the hospital. They believe that the pulmonary lesions are characteristic. In this publication and elsewhere MacCallum has designated the lesion “interstitial bronchopneumonia.”
The epidemic of streptococcus pneumonia and empyema occurring at Camp Dodge, Iowa, from March 20 to May 10 is described by Miller and Lusk[[75]]. During this period there were 400 cases of pneumonia, whereas from September 20, 1917, to March 20 there had been only 276 instances of lobar pneumonia. The type of pneumonia changed, there was more severe intoxication and empyema became very frequent; in 85 of 95 exudates streptococci were found. The outbreak of pneumonia bore no relation to measles. The authors state that a mild tracheitis was prevalent in the cantonment during March, and whenever a large group of soldiers congregated coughing was noticeable.
MacCallum[[76]] studied the pneumonia at Camp Dodge during May and found 17 instances of the lesion which he had designated interstitial bronchopneumonia; of these, 9 followed measles, although in the earlier part of the epidemic there appear to have been, he states, few such cases. Cultures made at autopsy, except in a few fatal cases of uncomplicated lobar pneumonia caused by the pneumococcus, showed the hemolytic streptococcus in every situation throughout the respiratory tract and pleura.