Physical examinations include: observing the breathing rate, which is often fast and shallow. Tapping the chest reveals that the affected part of the lung sounds dull, because the lung is filled with fluid.
Further investigations: chest x-ray to confirm presence of infection, microscope examination of a sputum sample to identify bacteria, blood tests to mea
sure the white cell count, more specific tests which detect antibodies produced in response to a specific organism, and arterial blood test to measure circulating oxygen levels.
Pneumonia is usually treated with antibiotics, but these are only effective if the pneumonia is due to bacterium
The choice of antibiotics depends on the bacterium. The choice of drug also depends on many other factors, such as: whether the patient has an allergy, whether there is a kidney or liver damage, where the patient is pregnant.
Most patients can be treated with a seven day course of a single antibiotic
In the past, pneumonia was common cause of death to adults, but nowadays, young, previously healthy people with simple pneumonia tend to recover completely within two to three weeks.
In some cases however, pneumonia may be fatal (either due to the patient being frail or the pneumonia itself is severe,) which makes it increasingly difficult to diagnose.