Chapter 15: mycobacterium Flashcards
mycobacteria include 2 main species
another one too
mycobacterium tuberculosis
mycobacterium leprae
nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) -more prevalent than other two combined in US
mycobacteria descrption
and staining
rods with lipid laden cell walls
-acid fast staining
1/3 of all AIDS pts worldwide also have
TB
mycobacterium tuberculosis and oxygen
obligate aerobe
- makes sense bc it mainly infects lungs
- grows slowly and takes almost 6 weeks for growth
virulence factors tuberculosis
mycolic acid, mycoside
cord factor: parallel growth of bacteria so appear as cords
-inhibit neutrophil migration and damage mitochondria
sulfatides: inhibti phagosome from fusing with lysosome that contains bacteriolcidal enzymes
wax D: adjuvant that may be part of m tuberculosis that activates the protective cell immune system
mike (mycosides) is waxing (wax D) his SUrfboard (sulfatides) and has his surfboard (CORD)
-has cough and weight loss
pathogenesis of TB
facultative intracellular growth
-inhaled bacteria cause local infiltration of neutropihls and macrophages, phagocytosed bacteria not killed
cell mediated immunity
-macrophages present to T cells then t cells head to site and activate macrophages in lungs which causes caseous necrosis
PPD test
-how done
false positive
false negative
injected antigen under skin gives delayed type hypersensitivity
- latent tuberculosis
- if positive doesn’t mean pt has active TB
- could mean exposure and infection at some time in past
false postive: people people from other countries have had BCG vaccine which prevents severe TB in children but provides minimal immunity into later years
false negative test: pts with TB dont react to PPD bc of anergy, due to steroid use, malnutrition, AIDS
primary TB
- symptoms
- asymotinatuc
- immune system
- reactivation
asymptomatic lung infection
cell mediated immunity walls off and suppress bacteria in caseous granulomas which heal with fibrosis and calcification and scar
ghon focus and complex
-
these bacteria lie dormant but can later rise up and cause disease
second infection = secondary or reactivation of TB
primary tuberculosis
transmitted via aerosolized droplets from respiratory secretions
inspired droplets go to middle and lower lung zones: small area of pneumonitis with neutrophils and adema
bacteria enter macrophages multiply and spread
symptomatic primary tuberculosis more common in who bc why symptoms if not contained then = in severe untreated cases?
more common in young, old, immunocompromised
- cell mediated response is not as strong
- enlargement of mediastinal LNs or hilar LNs
- granulomas with calfification
- if not contained = primary progressive disease
- in severe untreated cases lung infiltrates advance to lung necrosis = holes in lungs or cavities
secondary or reavtivation tuberculosis
why it reactivates
who is more at risk
temporary immune weakening
risk of reavtivation in all persons is 10% for lifetime
risk of reactivation in HIV infected indicviduals is 10% per year
what is the most common disease with tuberculosis
other involvment
pulmonary disease may involve pleura/pericardium adrenals kidneys LNs bones joints CNS
pulmonary tuberculosis
infection occurs in upper lobe
infection grow, caseate, lquify, cavitate
pt presents with lowgrade fever night sweats, weight loss and productive cought with maybe blood
pleural and pericardial infection with TB
infected fluid collections around lung or heart
LN infection TB
- LN involved most
- this is called
most common extrapulmonary manifestiation of TB
- cervival LNs most involved
- scrofula