Klebsiella pneumonia Infection
What is Klebsiella pneumonia infection?
Klebsiella pneumonia infection, often called Klebsiella pneumonia or simply Klebsiella, is a bacterial infection caused by Gramânegative rods of the genus Klebsiella. The most common species involved in human disease is Klebsiella pneumoniae. These organisms normally reside in the gastrointestinal tract, skin, and upper respiratory passages without causing harm. However, when they gain entry to normally sterile sitesâsuch as the lungs, bloodstream, urinary tract, or surgical woundsâthey can cause serious illness.
In the United States and many other countries, Klebsiella species are among the leading causes of hospitalâacquired (nosocomial) infections, especially in intensiveâcare units and among patients who have received broadâspectrum antibiotics, mechanical ventilation, or invasive devices. The infection can range from a mild urinary tract infection to lifeâthreatening pneumonia, sepsis, or meningitis. Because many strains produce extendedâspectrum betaâlactamases (ESBL) or carbapenemâresistant enzymes, treatment can be challenging, making early recognition essential.
Common Causes
The bacteria themselves are not âcausesâ in the traditional sense; rather, certain conditions and exposures increase the risk that Klebsiella will invade and cause disease. The most frequent predisposing factors include:
- Hospitalization or longâterm care facility stayâparticularly in intensiveâcare units.
- Use of invasive devices such as urinary catheters, central venous catheters, endotracheal tubes, or feeding tubes.
- Recent broadâspectrum antibiotic therapy that disrupts normal flora and selects for resistant organisms.
- Ventilatorâassociated pneumonia (VAP) â patients on mechanical ventilation are at high risk.
- Chronic lung disease (e.g., COPD, bronchiectasis) that impairs clearance of secretions.
- Immunocompromised stateâincluding chemotherapy, organ transplantation, HIV/AIDS, or longâterm steroids.
- Diabetes mellitusâhigh blood glucose levels impair neutrophil function.
- Recent abdominal or pelvic surgeryâespecially procedures involving the gastrointestinal tract.
- Alcohol abuseâwhich can depress cough reflex and immune defenses.
- Travel or residence in regions with high prevalence of multidrugâresistant Klebsiella, such as parts of Asia and the Middle East.
Associated Symptoms
Klebsiella infection can affect many organ systems. Below are the classic symptom patterns for the most common clinical presentations.
Pneumonia (Lung Infection)
- Fever, chills, and sweats
- Productive cough with thick, bloodâtinged or âcurrantâjellyâ sputum (characteristic but not universal)
- Shortness of breath or rapid breathing
- Pleuritic chest pain (sharp pain that worsens with breathing)
- General fatigue and malaise
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
- Burning sensation during urination
- Frequent urge to void, sometimes with only small amounts of urine
- Cloudy or foulâsmelling urine
- Lower abdominal or back pain
- Fever or chills if infection spreads to kidneys (pyelonephritis)
Bloodstream Infection / Sepsis
- High fever or hypothermia
- Rapid heart rate (tachycardia) and rapid breathing (tachypnea)
- Confusion, altered mental status
- Low blood pressure (hypotension)
- Skin mottling or a rash
Other Sites
Less common, but possible, manifestations include wound infections, intraâabdominal abscesses, meningitis, and osteomyelitis. In each case, symptoms reflect the organ involvedâe.g., localized pain, swelling, or neurologic deficits.
When to See a Doctor
Because Klebsiella can progress quickly, especially in vulnerable patients, seek medical attention promptly if you notice:
- Fever of 100.4°F (38°C) or higher lasting more than 24âŻhours.
- Persistent cough with thick, colored sputum, especially if you cough up blood.
- Severe shortness of breath, chest pain, or a feeling of âtightnessâ in the chest.
- Burning urination accompanied by fever, flank pain, or blood in the urine.
- Rapid heart rate, confusion, or a sudden drop in blood pressure.
- Any new or worsening symptoms after a recent surgery, hospital stay, or use of a catheter.
People with diabetes, chronic lung disease, weakened immune systems, or recent antibiotic use should be especially vigilant.
Diagnosis
Accurate diagnosis hinges on a combination of clinical assessment, imaging, and laboratory testing.
1. Medical History & Physical Exam
Doctors ask about recent hospitalizations, device use, antibiotic exposure, and underlying illnesses. A focused exam looks for lung findings (crackles, wheezes), abdominal tenderness, catheter sites, or signs of sepsis.
2. Laboratory Tests
- Blood cultures â drawn before antibiotics to identify bacteremia.
- Sputum Gram stain & culture â identifies the organism and its antibiotic sensitivities.
- Urine culture â essential for suspected urinary tract infection.
- Complete blood count (CBC) â often shows elevated white blood cells.
- Serum lactate â helps gauge severity of sepsis.
3. Imaging
- Chest Xâray â looks for consolidations typical of pneumonia (often lobar or multilobar).
- CT scan of the chest â provides detailed view of abscesses or necrotizing infection.
- Ultrasound or CT of the abdomen/pelvis â used when intraâabdominal infection is suspected.
4. Antimicrobial Sensitivity Testing
Because many Klebsiella strains produce ESBL or carbapenemâresistance, labs test which antibiotics are still effective. This guides targeted therapy and helps reduce the spread of resistant organisms.
Treatment Options
Treatment combines antimicrobial therapy, supportive care, and, when necessary, procedural interventions.
1. Antibiotic Therapy
Empiric (initial) antibiotics are started before culture results, then narrowed once sensitivities are known.
- Firstâline agents (if susceptible):
- Ceftriaxone or cefotaxime
- Fluoroquinolones (e.g., levofloxacin) â use with caution due to resistance.
- Trimethoprimâsulfamethoxazole (TMPâSMX) â limited by resistance.
- ESBLâproducing strains:
- Carbapenems (imipenem, meropenem, ertapenem) are usually preferred.
- Newer βâlactam/βâlactamase inhibitor combinations (ceftazidimeâavibactam, meropenemâvaborbactam) for resistant isolates.
- Carbapenemâresistant Klebsiâlla (CRKP):
- Polymyxins (colistin, polymyxin B)
- Tigecycline
- Fosfomycin (intravenous)
- Combination therapy is often employed to improve outcomes.
Treatment duration typically ranges from 7â14âŻdays for uncomplicated infections; severe pneumonia or bloodstream infection may require 2â3âŻweeks of therapy.
2. Supportive Care
- Oxygen supplementation for hypoxia.
- Intravenous fluids to maintain blood pressure in sepsis.
- Fever reducers (acetaminophen, ibuprofen) as needed.
- Bronchodilators or chest physiotherapy for patients with obstructive lung disease.
3. Procedural Interventions
- Drainage of abscesses â percutaneous or surgical drainage of lung, intraâabdominal, or softâtissue collections.
- Removal of infected devices â e.g., changing a urinary catheter or central line.
- Mechanical ventilation â for severe respiratory failure.
4. Home Care After Discharge
- Complete the full prescribed antibiotic course, even if you feel better.
- Stay hydrated; drink plenty of water to help clear urinary infections.
- Practice deepâbreathing exercises and ambulation to improve lung expansion.
- Monitor temperature twice daily and track any new or worsening symptoms.
Prevention Tips
Because many cases are healthcareâassociated, infection control is crucial, but personal steps also reduce risk.
- Hand hygiene â wash hands with soap and water or use alcoholâbased hand rubs before eating, after using the restroom, and after contact with healthcare settings.
- Appropriate antibiotic use â only take antibiotics when prescribed, and finish the entire course.
- Limit unnecessary catheter use â advocate for removal of urinary or central lines as soon as they are no longer needed.
- Vaccinations â stay upâtoâdate with pneumococcal vaccines (PCV13, PPSV23) and annual influenza vaccine, which reduce secondary bacterial pneumonia.
- Good respiratory hygiene â cover coughs and sneezes with a tissue or elbow, and avoid close contact with sick individuals.
- Manage chronic conditions â keep diabetes, COPD, and heart disease well controlled.
- Maintain a healthy lifestyle â balanced diet, regular exercise, and adequate sleep strengthen immune defenses.
- Hospital infectionâcontrol measures â ensure healthcare facilities follow standard precautions, contact isolation for known resistant organisms, and environmental cleaning.
Emergency Warning Signs
If you or someone you care for experiences any of the following, seek emergency medical care (call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department) immediately:
- Severe shortness of breath or inability to speak full sentences.
- Chest pain that radiates to the arm, neck, or jaw.
- Sudden confusion, inability to stay awake, or new seizures.
- Rapidly dropping blood pressure (feeling faint, dizziness, cool clammy skin).
- High fever (âĽâŻ103°F / 39.4°C) with chills and shaking.
- Visible pus or foulâsmelling drainage from a wound or catheter site.
- Rapid heart rate (>âŻ120 beats per minute) accompanied by weakness.
**References**
- Mayo Clinic. âKlebsiella pneumoniae infection.â Accessed May 2024.
- CDC. âAntibiotic Resistance Threats in the United States, 2019.â Accessed May 2024.
- National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. âKlebsiella pneumoniae.â Accessed May 2024.
- World Health Organization. âGlobal priority list of antibioticâresistant bacteria.â Accessed May 2024.
- Cleveland Clinic. âHospitalâAcquired Pneumonia.â Accessed May 2024.
- J. Lee etâŻal., âManagement of ESBLâproducing Klebsiella pneumoniae infections,â *Clinical Infectious Diseases*, 2022.