tuberculosis Flashcards

1
Q

is TB globally incerasing or decreasing?

A

decreasing

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2
Q

how many people are infected worldwide

A

2 billion

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3
Q

how is TB spread?

A

Airborne

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4
Q

are all AAFBs are TB

A

no

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5
Q

can tb be spread by Mycobacterium bovis, which can be spread by consumption of unpasteurized infected cows’ milk ??

A

yes common in uk

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6
Q

whats the immunopathology of activated macrophages?

A

goes to epithelioid cells which creates langhan’s giant cells

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7
Q

whats the immunopathology of Accumulation of macrophages, epithelioid & Langhan’s cells

A

granuloma

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8
Q

what does the Th1 cells do?

A

Eliminates / Reduces number of invading mycobacteria

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9
Q

what is tissue destruction a consequence of?

A

activation of macrophages

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10
Q

what part of the body spreads mycobacteria?

A

lymphatics to draining hilar lymph nodes

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11
Q

what are symptoms of tb with primary infection

A

usually no symptoms, can be fever, malaise
erythema nodosum
rarely chest signs

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12
Q

what are the fates of primary infection

A

progressive disease
contained latent
cleared cured

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13
Q

what are the 2 otcomes with primary infections?

A

Primary infection progresses to Tuberculous bronchopneumonia

Miliary TB (looked like millet seeds on autopsy) develops, with hematogenous spread of bacteria to multiple organs

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14
Q

what happens when primary infection progresses to Tuberculous bronchopneumonia

A

Primary focus continues to enlarge - cavitation
Enlarged hilar lymph compress bronchi, lobar collapse
Enlarged lymph node discharges into bronchus

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15
Q

what would it look like on an xray if you had miliary tb

A

fine mottling

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16
Q

do animals develop post-primary disease?

A

no humans do though

17
Q

what are clinical presentations of TB

A

cough, fever, sweats, weight loss,

18
Q

what are the tests to determine TB?

A

Sputum; 3 samples, 8-24hrs gap, at least 1 early morning sample
Induced sputum
Bronchoscopy with BAL
Endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS) with biopsy
Lumbar puncture in CNS TB
Urine in urogenital TB
Aspirate/biopsy from tissue ( lymph-node, bone, joint, brain, abscess …)
Mantoux or IGRA are NOT routinely used in diagnosing active TB

19
Q

what is the treatment of tuberculosis?

A

Multiple drug therapy is essential
Single agent treatment leads to drug resistant organisms within 14 days
Therapy must continue for at least 6 months
TB therapy is a job for committed specialists only
Legal requirement to notify all cases
Test for HIV, Hepatitis B and C

20
Q

whats the standard treatment for TB?

A

2 R/H/Z/E + 4 R/H Standard 70kg patient takes 12 tablets daily
6 months duration
7-9 months ( Monoresistance)
12 months (CNS TB, H monoresistance extensive disease)
9-12-18-20 months (MDR-RR TB)

Pyridoxine (Vitamin B6) with isoniazid to reduce risk of neuropathy
Steroids (CNS, Milliar, Pericardial)
Vitamin-D substitution ?

21
Q

side effects of rifampicin

A

Orange ‘Irn Bru’ urine/tears/lenses

Induces liver enzymes, prednisolone, anticonvulsants

All hormonal contraceptive methods ineffective

Hepatitis

22
Q

side effects of isoniazid

A

Hepatitis

Peripheral neuropathy (pyridoxine B6)

23
Q

side effects of Pyrazinamide

A

Hepatitis

Gout

24
Q

side effects of Ethambutol

A

Optic neuropathy (check visual acuity)

25
Q

who is given the BCG vaccination?

A

Neonates, or unvaccinated children under 5, whose parents/grandparents were born in a country with an annual incidence of TB of 40/100,000 or greater

26
Q

whats screening for latent TB

A

Contacts of people with active pulmonary or laryngeal TB who are aged ≤65 years (hepatotoxicity increases with age)
New entrants from high endemic areas
‘Pre-biologics’ (TNF-alpha inhibitors)
Outbreaks

27
Q

treatment for latent TB

A

Rifampicin & Isoniazid for three months, or
Isoniazid only for six months, or
Rifampicin only for six months, or
Rifapentine & Isoniazide once weekly for 12 weeks (underserved population