How Is Pneumonia Tested? Understanding the Diagnosis at Monarch Medicine
Pneumonia Testing & Diagnosis in Carmel, IN — What to Expect at Monarch Medicine
How pneumonia is actually evaluated at urgent care — CURB-65 severity scoring, the typical vs. atypical antibiotic distinction, chest X-ray limitations, and when pneumonia requires the ER instead.
Pneumonia is one of the respiratory diagnoses I take most seriously at Monarch Medicine — not because most patients who come in with cough and fever have pneumonia, but because getting the diagnosis right matters significantly for treatment selection. Most urgent care visits for pneumonia-like symptoms turn out to be viral upper respiratory infections, bronchitis, or influenza. When chest findings and clinical assessment do point to pneumonia, the next questions are: what kind, how severe, and is this patient appropriate for outpatient treatment or does the clinical picture require hospital-level care?
I’m Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP, board-certified family physician and Medical Director at Monarch Medicine. This guide explains what actually happens during a pneumonia evaluation at our clinic — including the validated severity scoring tool that guides the hospitalization decision, the critical difference between typical and atypical pneumonia organisms, and the chest X-ray limitations that most patients aren’t told about. For related content, see our guides on upper respiratory infections, adult sinusitis, and persistent cough.
What Pneumonia Is — and What It Isn’t
Pneumonia is infection of the lung parenchyma — the air sacs (alveoli) themselves, as opposed to the airways, which are the territory of bronchitis. This distinction matters because bronchitis is almost always viral and does not respond to antibiotics, while bacterial pneumonia does. The two conditions share many symptoms — cough, fever, chest discomfort — and cannot be reliably distinguished on symptoms alone without chest X-ray and clinical examination.
| Feature | Pneumonia | Acute Bronchitis | Upper Respiratory Infection |
|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Lung alveoli (air sacs) | Bronchial airways | Nose, throat, sinuses, upper airways |
| Cause | Bacterial, viral, or atypical organisms | >90% viral | >90% viral |
| Fever | Often present, can be high (102–104°F) | Usually low-grade or absent | Low-grade or absent (higher with influenza) |
| Cough | Productive, persistent; may produce discolored sputum | Persistent, often productive; can last 2–3 weeks | Usually mild; dry or mildly productive |
| Chest exam | Crackles, decreased breath sounds, dullness to percussion in affected area | Scattered rhonchi; clear with coughing | Usually clear |
| Chest X-ray | Infiltrate, consolidation, or opacity in affected area | Normal or hyperinflation only | Normal |
| Antibiotics indicated? | Yes, for bacterial and atypical pneumonia; not for viral pneumonia | No — viral; antibiotics not recommended by IDSA guidelines | No — viral in >90% of cases |
| Oxygen saturation | May be reduced; <92% warrants urgent evaluation | Usually normal | Normal |
The CURB-65 Severity Score: The Hospitalization Decision Framework
The single most important clinical question in pneumonia management is not what antibiotic to prescribe — it’s where the patient should be treated. Outpatient treatment is appropriate for low-severity pneumonia in otherwise healthy patients. Higher severity pneumonia has a meaningful 30-day mortality risk that requires hospital monitoring, IV antibiotics, or supplemental oxygen.
CURB-65 is the validated clinical severity scoring tool used in emergency medicine and family medicine to guide this decision. Dr. Clay applies it at every pneumonia visit.
- Confusion — new disorientation to person, place, or time
- Urea (BUN) >19 mg/dL — marker of dehydration and renal compromise
- Respiratory rate ≥30 breaths per minute
- Blood pressure — systolic <90 mmHg or diastolic ≤60 mmHg
- Age 65 or older
| Score | 30-Day Mortality Risk | Recommended Setting | Clinical Action at Monarch Medicine |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–1 | Low (<3%) | Outpatient treatment appropriate | Antibiotic prescribing and return precautions documented in MyChart; follow-up in 48–72 hours if not improving |
| 2 | Moderate (~9%) | Consider hospital admission; short-stay observation may be appropriate | Clinical judgment applied — patients with score 2 and reassuring vitals, normal O₂, and reliable follow-up may be managed outpatient with close monitoring |
| 3–5 | High (17–57%) | Hospital admission recommended; ICU consideration for score 4–5 | Transfer to emergency department facilitated; clinical summary provided |
Typical vs. Atypical Pneumonia: Why the Distinction Drives Antibiotic Selection
One of the most clinically consequential pneumonia distinctions for outpatient antibiotic prescribing is the difference between typical bacterial pneumonia and atypical pneumonia — commonly called “walking pneumonia.”
| Feature | Typical Bacterial Pneumonia | Atypical Pneumonia (“Walking Pneumonia”) |
|---|---|---|
| Common organisms | Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Staphylococcus aureus | Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydophila pneumoniae, Legionella |
| Onset | Abrupt — hours to 1–2 days | Gradual — days to weeks; often preceded by URI-like prodrome |
| Fever | High, often with rigors and chills | Low-grade or absent; patient may not feel significantly ill |
| Cough | Productive with purulent or rust-colored sputum | Dry, persistent, often severe; may last weeks |
| Functional status | Significant limitation; patient usually cannot work or attend school | Often ambulatory and functional — hence “walking” pneumonia |
| Chest X-ray | Lobar consolidation, often unilateral | Bilateral, patchy, or interstitial infiltrates; may look disproportionately mild vs. symptoms |
| First-line antibiotic | Amoxicillin or amoxicillin-clavulanate for outpatient treatment | Azithromycin (Z-pack) or doxycycline — beta-lactams do not cover atypical organisms |
| Who is affected | All ages; higher severity in elderly and immunocompromised | Most common in school-age children, young adults, and patients in close-contact settings |
“Walking pneumonia is the diagnosis that most surprises patients. They come in expecting to feel terrible — and they do have pneumonia on chest X-ray — but they drove themselves in and are answering questions normally. That’s Mycoplasma until proven otherwise, and azithromycin is a very different prescription than amoxicillin. Getting the organism right matters.” Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP — Monarch Medicine Urgent Care
Chest X-Ray: What It Can and Cannot Tell Us
Chest X-ray is the core diagnostic tool for pneumonia confirmation at Monarch Medicine — and it’s important that patients understand its limitations alongside its value.
A positive chest X-ray showing an infiltrate or consolidation confirms pneumonia when it’s there. The limitation is in the other direction: chest X-ray has approximately 60–70% sensitivity for pneumonia in early disease. This means a meaningful percentage of pneumonia cases — particularly in the first 24–48 hours of illness — will have a normal or equivocal X-ray despite active lung infection. False-negative rates are higher in dehydrated patients (insufficient fluid in the alveoli to produce visible infiltrate) and immunocompromised patients.
Clinical judgment alongside imaging drives the treatment decision — not imaging alone. A patient with convincing clinical presentation, abnormal auscultation findings, fever, productive cough, and reduced oxygen saturation may be treated empirically for pneumonia even with an initially normal X-ray, with follow-up imaging in 24–48 hours if the clinical picture warrants it.
What Diagnostic Testing Is Actually Appropriate for Outpatient Pneumonia
IDSA/ATS community-acquired pneumonia guidelines do not recommend routine blood cultures, CBC, or sputum culture for outpatient patients with low-severity CAP who are otherwise healthy. These tests add cost, delay, and rarely change outpatient management because empiric antibiotic therapy is started before culture results return (48–72 hours). At Monarch Medicine, we order diagnostics based on clinical necessity — not routine protocol.
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Chest X-ray — on-site digital, same-day results Core confirmatory tool through our walk-in X-ray service — interpreted in the context of the full clinical picture, not in isolation
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Pulse oximetry — measured at every pneumonia visit Continuous oxygen saturation measurement guides severity assessment and the hospitalization decision; saturation below 92% changes the clinical pathway immediately
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Rapid influenza A/B testing Influenza can cause primary viral pneumonia or predispose to secondary bacterial pneumonia; rapid flu testing through our diagnostic testing services takes 15 minutes and changes the treatment decision when positive
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Rapid COVID-19 testing SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia can present identically to other viral pneumonias with bilateral infiltrates; positive COVID-19 test triggers Paxlovid eligibility review for high-risk patients within 5 days of symptom onset
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RSV rapid testing RSV causes significant lower respiratory tract disease in adults over 65 and high-risk patients; testing guides supportive care decisions
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Blood tests — ordered when clinically indicated, not routinely CBC, metabolic panel, and blood cultures are appropriate when hospitalization is being considered, when severity is uncertain, or when underlying comorbidities raise the clinical complexity — not as routine outpatient CAP protocol
When Pneumonia Requires the ER — Not Urgent Care
Go directly to the ER for: oxygen saturation below 90% on room air, respiratory rate above 30 breaths per minute at rest, confusion, disorientation, or altered mental status, systolic blood pressure below 90 mmHg, inability to maintain adequate oral intake or hydration, CURB-65 score of 3 or higher, chest pain severe enough to restrict breathing, or any patient who appears severely ill regardless of measured values.
Monarch Medicine is equipped for outpatient pneumonia diagnosis and treatment. We are not equipped to provide supplemental oxygen therapy, IV antibiotics, or continuous cardiac and respiratory monitoring — all of which high-severity pneumonia requires. If your clinical picture indicates hospital-level care, Dr. Clay will tell you directly, provide a documented clinical summary, and help facilitate transfer.
Frequently Asked Questions About Pneumonia Testing
Can urgent care diagnose and treat pneumonia?
What is the difference between regular pneumonia and walking pneumonia?
When does pneumonia require the ER instead of urgent care?
Does a negative chest X-ray rule out pneumonia?
Do I need blood tests to diagnose pneumonia?
Monarch Medicine Urgent Care — Carmel, IN
Walk-ins welcome · No appointment needed · Open 7 days
Not sure whether your symptoms need urgent care or the ER? Call (317) 804-4203 — we triage over the phone during open hours. If your oxygen saturation, respiratory rate, or overall clinical status warrants emergency evaluation, we will tell you directly.
Last medically reviewed by Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP on February 19, 2026
About the Author
Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP
Board-Certified Family Physician
Dr. Lisa Clay is a board-certified family physician with nearly two decades of clinical experience. She founded Monarch Medicine Urgent Care in Carmel, Indiana to deliver compassionate, physician-led care with minimal wait times and transparent pricing.
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