Maxi CBL - Pulmonary TB Flashcards
1
Q
What are the typical symptoms of pulmonary TB? [8]
A
- Breathing difficulty
- Chest pain.
- Cough (usually with mucus)
- Coughing up blood
- Excessive sweating, particularly at night
- Fatigue
- Fever
- Weight loss
2
Q
Which groups of people are at higher risk of developing pulmonary TB? [3]
A
- Elderly men
- People who grew up or visit areas of the world where TB is much more common
- Patients who are HIV-positive
3
Q
What is the potential differential diagnosis of pulmonary TB? [1]
A
bronchial carcinoma
4
Q
What investigations should you carry out on a patient with suspected pulmonary TB? [5]
A
-
Sputum sample
- examined for the presence of TB bacilli by special stains, typically the Ziehl-Nielsen stain.
-
CT scan of the chest
- this can help differentiate between active TB and the presence of a bronchial neoplasm.
-
Bronchoscopy
- this will detect any intra-airway neoplasm and also provide additional material for culture
- the pleural effusion should be tapped and the pleural fluid examined for TB
-
Pleural biopsy
- can also be helpful as it may show typical necrotising granulomas in TB
- Biopsy under direct vision (thoracoscopy) or by image guidance has a higher sensitivity.
5
Q
Describe the standard treatment therapy for pulmonary TB, including which drugs are included and how these drugs are altered throughout the course of treatment [7]
A
- Current standard therapy starts with 4 drugs with known good activity against TB (first-line drugs), which are:
- rifampicin,
- isoniazid,
- pyrazinamide
- ethambutol
- Pyrazinamide has little activity against very slow growing bacilli and is thus dropped after 2 months when typically only very slow growing bacilli remain.
- Once sensitivities of the TB are known, the ethambutol can also be dropped.
- Rifampicin and isoniazid are continued throughout the duration of therapy, typically 6 months.
6
Q
What are the potential side effects of each of the TB drugs and how should they be monitored? [4]
A
- Isoniazid can lead to a peripheral neuropathy due to antagonism of the effects of pyridoxine (Vitamin B6).
- hence, pyridoxine treatment as a prophylactic measure is added to the standard regimen.
- Rifampicin colours urine a red colour and is a potent inducer of hepatic cytochrome P450 enzymes that can lead to dramatic changes in the metabolism of numerous drugs that will thus require dosage adjustment.
- Rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide are all potentially hepatotoxic and this can be rapid and profound requiring initial careful monitoring of therapy.
- Ethambutol can affect vision, so visual acuity prior to starting treatment should be recorded to allow changes later to be evaluated better.
7
Q
What are the potential complications of TB (extra-nodal)? [9]
A
- Nodal TB.
- Cervical lymph nodes are typically involved.
- Osteomyelitis.
- TB has a predilection for vertebral bones
- This can also then extend to form a spinal/paraspinal abscess with cord compression or extension into the sheath of the psoas muscle
- CNS TB.
- TB can spread into the brain and CSF giving two main types of infection:
- TB meningitis,
- a slowly progressive condition with altered conscious level and progressive lower cranial nerve palsies.
- Cerebral TB.
- foci of infection can behave like a space-occupying lesion, with seizures, nervous systemic signs etc.
- TB meningitis,
- TB can spread into the brain and CSF giving two main types of infection:
- Other organ systems that can be affected: renal tract including testes/ovaries, larynx, skin, eye, liver.