Exams and Tests
Your doctor will usually diagnose
pneumonia by using your
medical history, a
physical exam, and a chest X-ray. Based on the medical
history and physical exam, your doctor may start your treatment right away
without doing other tests. The need for more tests often depends on how severe
your symptoms are, your age, and your overall health. In general, the sicker
you are, the more tests you will have. This is especially true for older adults
and infants.
A
chest X-ray is almost always done to check for changes
in the lungs that may mean pneumonia and to look for other causes of your
symptoms. However, an X-ray does not always show whether you have pneumonia,
especially if the X-ray is done when you first get sick.
In some cases, the X-ray results may:
- Suggest the type of organism (bacterial, viral, or fungal)
causing pneumonia.
- Show
complications of pneumonia.
- Show
conditions that may occur with pneumonia, such as fluid in the chest cavity or
a collapsed lung.
- Reveal another condition, such as
heart failure, lung cancer, or
acute bronchitis.
If you are very ill, have severe shortness of breath, or have a
condition that increases your risk (such as
asthma or
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), your doctor
may examine your mucus.
- In a Gram stain, you cough up a sample of mucus
(sputum) that is then treated with a material (Gram stain) and examined under a
microscope. This test may indicate what type of organism (bacterium or fungus)
is causing the pneumonia. This test can help your doctor choose the best
medicine for your infection.
- In a
sputum culture and sensitivity, a sample of mucus is
placed in a container with substances that will make bacteria or fungi grow. If
bacteria or fungi grow, your doctor can identify them and choose the correct
treatment. Unfortunately, getting lung mucus that has not been contaminated
with throat or mouth mucus is difficult. So, the results are not always helpful
in identifying the cause of pneumonia. This test may be less useful if you have
already started using antibiotics.
If you have severe pneumonia, you may need
other tests, including tests to check for
complications and to determine how well your
immune system is working.
A urine test is available that may identify within 15 minutes
whether you are infected with Streptococcus pneumoniae,
one of the main causes of bacterial pneumonia, or Legionella
pneumophila, the bacterium that causes
Legionnaires' disease and sometimes can cause
pneumonia.
Although experts consider the test to be useful for the
identification of Legionella pneumophila, doctors
generally do not use it to identify Streptococcus
pneumoniae.4 But it may be useful in adults
with severe pneumonia and when a Gram stain has not identified the
bacteria.5
In people with
impaired immune systems, pneumonia may be caused by
other organisms, including some forms of fungi, such as Pneumocystis jiroveci (formally called Pneumocystis carinii). This fungus frequently causes
pneumonia in people who have AIDS. Some doctors may
suggest an
HIV test if they think that Pneumocystis jiroveci is causing the pneumonia.