In our world today there are several tiny germs that can cause a person to become infected with the horrible infection, “walking pneumonia.”
Walking pneumonia is generally caused by viruses, bacteria, pollutants, fungus, or even inhaled chemical irritants. However, one of the most common causes of this infection is a bacterial microorganism known as mycoplasma pneumonia. Not only is the bacteria mycoplasma a common form of pneumonia, there is also the bacteria legionella pneumonia and the chlamydophila pneumonia bacteria.
The mycoplasma pneumonia is mostly responsible for the inflammation and irritation in your lungs when you are affected with walking pneumonia.
Walking pneumonia could take a prolonged length of time for it to spread to another person but it is a fairly contagious illness. It can be passed to another person throughout the water vapors within the air. Therefore, if an infected individual coughs, sneezes, or even spits around someone else that could cause the non-infected individual to catch the walking pneumonia illness. For people whose immune system is in excellent condition, it allows for their body to help filter those harmful germs out of the air and helps to protect your lungs from the horrible infection. In some cases however, the germs manage to enter your lungs anyways. When this happiness a germ is even stronger. Your immune system becomes weak as well, and your body begins to fail in filtering all those germs that you are breathing.
Your airways and mouth are always exposed to numerous germs since you inhale air through your mouth and nose. Coughing is one of the best ways to help keep the nasty germs from reaching your lungs. If you do not cough and the germ reaches your lungs, depending upon your immune system, if it does not take the proper action you could be coming down with walking pneumonia.
In most adults another common cause of walking pneumonia is due to a respiratory virus. Most of these cases of walking pneumonia that are due to a virus can take up to 1 to 3 weeks to treat or your physician might highly recommend that you get addition treatment by being placed in your local hospital.
A fungus is one of the least common causes for walking pneumonia. However, fungi tend to attack a person that has a weak immune system such as a person with HIV/AIDS. So some of the medications that are prescribed for a person with the walking pneumonia due to the fungal infection rarely have an effect on their illness.