## Correct Answer: B. Streptococcus pneumonia This case presents a child with AIDS (CD4 <50 cells/mm³) with lobar pneumonia—consolidation in the right lower lobe with bronchial breath sounds and crepitations. The discriminating feature is the **lobar consolidation pattern** on chest X-ray, which is classic for bacterial pneumonia, not opportunistic infection. In HIV-positive children with CD4 counts >50 cells/mm³, *Streptococcus pneumoniae* remains the most common cause of community-acquired pneumonia, even in advanced immunosuppression. Although this child's CD4 is critically low (55 cells/mm³), the clinical presentation—acute fever, productive cough, focal consolidation with bronchial breath sounds—is typical of bacterial pneumonia rather than PCP or atypical infections. S. pneumoniae causes lobar pneumonia via classic pathophysiology: aspiration of nasopharyngeal flora, alveolar colonization, and inflammatory consolidation. In Indian pediatric HIV cohorts, S. pneumoniae remains the leading bacterial respiratory pathogen despite low CD4 counts. The presence of focal consolidation (not diffuse interstitial infiltrates) and bronchial breath sounds (indicating consolidation, not interstitial disease) strongly favor bacterial over opportunistic etiology. Per Indian guidelines and Harrison's, S. pneumoniae is the most common bacterial cause of pneumonia across all CD4 strata in HIV-positive children. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Mycoplasma** — Mycoplasma causes atypical pneumonia with bilateral interstitial infiltrates, not lobar consolidation. The clinical picture here—bronchial breath sounds, focal consolidation, and acute presentation—is inconsistent with mycoplasma. Additionally, mycoplasma is rare in severely immunocompromised children and does not explain the acute lobar pattern seen on imaging. **C. Pneumocystis jirovecii** — PCP typically presents with dyspnea, dry cough, and bilateral diffuse interstitial infiltrates ('ground-glass' appearance), not lobar consolidation. PCP is the most common opportunistic infection at CD4 <50 cells/mm³, but the imaging finding of focal right lower lobe consolidation with bronchial breath sounds excludes PCP. This is an NBE trap: students may reflexively choose PCP given the very low CD4 count, ignoring the clinical presentation. **D. Staphylococcus aureus** — While S. aureus can cause pneumonia in HIV-positive patients, it is less common than S. pneumoniae and typically occurs in hospitalized or IV drug-using populations. The community-acquired presentation with lobar consolidation in a pediatric patient points to S. pneumoniae. S. aureus is more associated with cavitary lesions or multiple nodules, not simple lobar consolidation. ## High-Yield Facts - **S. pneumoniae** is the most common bacterial cause of pneumonia in HIV-positive children across all CD4 counts, including CD4 <50 cells/mm³. - **Lobar consolidation** with bronchial breath sounds indicates bacterial pneumonia; diffuse interstitial infiltrates suggest PCP or viral/atypical infection. - **CD4 <50 cells/mm³** is the threshold for PCP prophylaxis (TMP-SMX) and PCP risk, but does not exclude bacterial pneumonia as the acute diagnosis. - **PCP presents with bilateral diffuse infiltrates** ('ground-glass'), not focal consolidation; this imaging distinction is critical for differential diagnosis. - **Vaccination against S. pneumoniae** (13-valent PCV, followed by 23-valent PPSV23) is recommended for all HIV-positive children in India, even with low CD4 counts. ## Mnemonics **LOBAR = Bacterial; DIFFUSE = Opportunistic** Lobar consolidation → think S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, Klebsiella. Diffuse interstitial infiltrates → think PCP, CMV, TB. Use imaging pattern to narrow the differential in HIV pneumonia. **PCP at CD4 <50; Pneumonia at ANY CD4** PCP risk peaks at CD4 <50, but bacterial pneumonia (S. pneumoniae) occurs at all CD4 levels. Low CD4 does not rule out bacterial infection; clinical presentation (lobar vs. diffuse) is the key discriminator. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs critically low CD4 count (55 cells/mm³) with PCP to lure students into reflexively choosing Pneumocystis jirovecii. However, the focal lobar consolidation and bronchial breath sounds are classic for bacterial pneumonia, not the diffuse interstitial pattern of PCP. The trap tests whether students rely on CD4 count alone or integrate clinical and radiological findings. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian pediatric HIV clinics, S. pneumoniae remains the leading cause of acute pneumonia even in children with CD4 <50 cells/mm³. The key bedside lesson: **always integrate imaging pattern with CD4 count**—lobar consolidation in any HIV-positive child suggests bacterial pneumonia and warrants empiric coverage with a respiratory fluoroquinolone or third-generation cephalosporin, regardless of CD4 count. Delayed diagnosis of bacterial pneumonia in favor of presumed PCP is a common clinical error. _Reference: Harrison Ch. 197 (HIV/AIDS); Robbins Ch. 8 (Infectious Disease); KD Tripathi Ch. 45 (Antimicrobials)_
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