Atypical pneumonia
Atypical pneumonia (English: atypical pneumonia), referred to as SARS, is a general term, refers to all the unknown pathogens caused by pneumonia. These pathogens may be symptoms of pneumonia caused by coronavirus, mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae or Legionella pneumoniae, and may also refer to pneumonia symptoms not caused by bacteria. The epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), which broke out in Guangdong Province and Hong Kong, China, in April 2003, is also caused by some coronavirus, one of which is atypical pneumonia. The disease spreads widely around the world, with more than 8,000 people infected and nearly 800 dead. In mainland China, "SARS" became synonymous with "SARS". The name of atypical pneumonia was first proposed in 1938, when seven patients with pneumonia had symptoms that were not the same as those of general bacterial pneumonia and were known as primary atypical pneumonia. ...