Signs and Symptoms of Pneumonia: Is Pneumonia Contagious?
Pneumonia refers to an infection of the lungs that results from various microorganisms such as bacteria, viruses, parasites and fungi. Read on to understand the signs and symptoms of pneumonia.

Signs and Symptoms of Pneumonia
In most cases, people have the symptoms of cold before developing pneumonia. It is followed by high fever, cough and chills. Severity of symptoms varies according to the causes and age of the patient. Chest pain is the most common symptom in most types of pneumonia.
- Bacterial pneumonia: Bacterial pneumonia leads to symptoms such as high fever, chills, chest pain, sweating, cough with thick, yellow or greenish sputum and shortness of breath.
- Viral pneumonia: Viral pneumonia is characterized by the signs that are similar to flu-like symptoms. It generally starts as a dry cough, fever, fatigue, headache and muscle pain. When the disease progresses, it causes shortness of breath and cough with small quantities of clear or white phlegm. Viral pneumonia invites the risk of developing a secondary bacterial pneumonia.
- Fungal pneumonia: This type of pneumonia is less common. Some people may develop acute pneumonia after inhaling the fungi, while some may develop chronic pneumonia.
- Pneumonia due to Mycoplasma: Mycoplasma are a genus of bacteria in which cell walls are absent, causing a lot of antibiotics to be ineffective against them as most antibiotics usually interrupt cell wall synthesis to kill the organisms. Mycoplasma cause the signs and symptoms of pneumonia similar to bacterial and viral pneumonia. These symptoms may be flu-like and mild. You may not require any medical treatment for this type of pneumonia. That's why this pneumonia is known as walking pneumonia.
- Pneumocystis carinii: It is an opportunistic organism that causes infection in people with AIDS. It can lead to pneumonia. The signs of such type of pneumonia are persistent cough, fever and shortness of breath.
Pneumonia is mainly caused by infections from microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi and viruses. Bacterial infection is the most common and most serious cause of pneumonia. Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most common bacterial species causing pneumonia in adults. Respiratory viruses are another common cause of pneumonia. Mycoplasma pneumoniae is the common microorganism causing pneumonia in children of 2-3 years of age. In some elderly people, pneumonia may be followed by influenza or common cold. There are different types of pneumonia depending upon the cause of disease such as community-acquired pneumonia (acquired at work or school), hospital-acquired pneumonia (gastroesophageal reflux disease is the predisposing factor), aspiration pneumonia (because of inhaling the foreign matter), pneumonia caused by opportunistic organisms (common in people with compromised immune system) and emerging pathogens such as outbreaks of H5N1 influenza virus/bird flu and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
Diagnosis and Treatment of Pneumonia
Diagnosis of pneumonia is based on the physical examination, imaging tests such as X-ray, bronchoscopy and certain laboratory investigations such as sputum examination and blood tests such as white blood cell count.
Treatment option for pneumonia depends upon the cause of pneumonia. Pneumonia can be treated with antibiotics, antiviral medications, antifungal medications, etc. Some over-the-counter medications are also recommended to treat pain, reduce fever and soothe coughing and sore throat.
Is Pneumonia Contagious?
People often ask, "Is pneumonia contagious? Will we catch the infection if we come in contact with an infected person?" Well, pneumonia is a life-threatening infection of lungs. However, pneumonia itself is not a contagious disease but bacteria and viruses that cause pneumonia can be contagious. People, when exposed to infection may catch the symptoms of normal cough and cold symptoms. It is not necessary that each person, exposed to cold virus or bacteria, develops pneumonia. It depends on the susceptibility and immunity of that individual. Transmission of infection may occur due to direct exposure to infectious secretions. Also, pneumonia pathogens can be transmitted from an ailing individual to healthy persons till about 3 days after starting off the antibiotic, antiviral or antifungal medication course (depending upon the class of pathogen). A good indication of whether or not pneumonia can still be contacted from someone is to look out for fever - if the patient does not have a fever or has ceased to have frequent chills and temperature fluctuations, he/she can be considered 'clean'.
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