Tuberculosis Flashcards

1
Q

How is tuberculosis transmitted?

A

Spread primarily by small particle droplet
Can be spread from coughing, sneezing, laughing, singing
Particles can stay in air for hours

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2
Q

Which individuals are at an increased risk of acquiring TB?

A
Low socioeconomic status
Poor nutrition
Lack of health care
Overcrowded living conditions
Ethnic minorities
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3
Q

Which individuals are at the highest risk of developing active disease within the first two years of acquiring infection?

A

Small children
Elderly adults
Pregnant or postpartum women

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4
Q

T/F: Children have a low ability to transmit disease to others because of low tidal volume

A

TRUE

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5
Q

What is the most common type of TB in United States?

A

Latent TB

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6
Q
What type of Tuberculosis am I?
Signs and symptoms can include:
Low-grade fever
Malaise
Poor appetite
Weight loss
Night sweats
Chills
Erythema nodosum
Keratoconjunctivitis
Mediastinal lymph nodes 
Difficulty swallowing or obstruction
Cough, starting at age 10
A

Pulmonary Tuberculosis

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7
Q

What type of Tuberculosis am I?
Very rare in the United States
Occurs most often in children under 3, elderly, or those with HIV
Travels from primary site through blood or lymph and seeds multiple organs
Leads to necrosis and cassation of organs
High fever, malaise, poor appetite, weight loss, fatigue, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly
Pulmonary symptoms may or may not be present

A

Miliary Tuberculosis

***Appears like miliary seeds in imaging

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8
Q
What type of Tuberculosis am I?
Signs and symptoms can include:
Lymph node disease—unilateral at start
Meningitis TB
Skin infection TB
Ocular TB
Endocrine gland TB
GU TB
Cardiac TB
Musculoskeletal TB
Abdominal TB
Middle ear TB
Mastoid TB
Larynx TB (very contagious through the air)
A

Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis

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9
Q

What is the name of the skin test for TB and when should it be read?

A

Mantoux PPD test

needs to be read in 48-72 hours

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10
Q

Which test for tuberculosis should an individual receive if they have received the BCG vaccine in the past?

A

Interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA)

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11
Q

Do we ever do a skin test on an individual who had a previous positive result?

A

NO
***Can cause huge, blistering reaction
Perform blood test or X-ray instead

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12
Q
What induration would be considered positive in the following individuals?
 children under 4 
people with other medical conditions 
immigrants
IV drug users
health care providers
anyone who has been exposed
A

> 10mm

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13
Q

What induration would be considered positive in the following individuals?
patients with organ transplants
clinical findings suggestive of TB
HIV immunosuppression
those who have had contact with known or suspected TB case

A

> 5 mm

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14
Q

TB blood tests are highly inaccurate in children________.

A

under 5

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15
Q

Which medication is the most commonly used for treatment of latent tuberculosis?

A

Isoniazid (INH)—most commonly used for latent TB

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