Tuberculosis Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the pathologenesis of TB

A

Mtb can affect every organ of the body but has tissue trophism for the lung.

Ingested by alveolar macrophages but escapes from the phagolysosome to multiply in the cytoplasm.

Mycolic acid and other lipids result in granuloma formation and resist host cell oxidative response.

Intense immune response causes local tissue destuction, resulting in cavitation in the lung.

Production of cytokines produce systemic effects: fever, and weight loss

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2
Q

Describe the primary and post-primary response to TB

A

Primary TB: primary complex with lesion and draining gland. Usually asymptomatic. Skin test conversion.

Progressive primary disease: haematogenous, lymphatic or local spread

Post-primary TB: reactivation of quiescent disease.
Local spread - pneumonia
haematogenous spread - miliary

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3
Q

How does the cell wall of mycobacterial cell wall influence pathogenicity?

A

Hydrophobic lipid cell envelope

Provides resistance to many antibiotics

resistance to killing by acidic and alkaline compounds,

resistance to complement lysis

resistance to oxidative burst and persistence in Macrophages

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4
Q

Describe the Mantoux test and its use

A

TB causes an infected type IV hypersensitivity reaction

Killing is mediated by T cells and activation of macrophages. Which mount an antibody response.

Intradermal injection with tuberculin causes a local reaction in the skin with the development of an inflammatory nodule.

Positive mantoux indicates exposure to TB

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5
Q

Clinical presentation of TB

A

Classical symptoms:

Night sweats, mild chonic cough with purulent sputum, fever, dyspnoea, bronchopneumonia

Clinical features vary dependent on the extent, stage and activity of disease

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6
Q

Miliary TB

A

Uncontrolled haematogenous dissemination due to primary progressive infection or reactivation. Visible as multiple nodules on CXR

Granuloma enlarges and ruptures into the airway which allows it to become widely disseminated. Causes numerous small granulomas in many organs e.g. kindeys, bone, liver, GIT

Occurs in impaired immunity e.g. infants, HIV

Acute medical emergency

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7
Q

How is TB diagnosed?

A

Clincal presentation

Chest X-ray

Staining: Ziehl-Neelsen or auramine

PCR or NAATs

IFNg Release Assay

Culture and sensitivity

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8
Q

Management of TB

A

Initial 2 month regime of rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide and ethambutol

4 months of rifampicin and isoniazid

Regular follow up required due to lack of compliance. DOTS short course should be used to imptove compliance.

Treatment may need to be prolonged if organism is resistant to drugs, patient is inolerant of drugs, site of infection means there is a slower response.

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9
Q

Presentation of TB on CXR

A

Consolidation at the apex of the lung (with cavitation)

Fibrosis or calcificaiton (scarring from previous disease)

Pleural effusion

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10
Q

Histological appearance of TB lesion

A

Central zone of caseous necrosis surrounded by epitheliod macrophages, giant cells and lymphocytes.

The infection may progress with systemic spread > death
In most cases, the primary lesion will organise and heal as the immune reaction to the organism develops, leaving a fibro-calcified nodule.

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11
Q

Gohn focus

A

Reaction at the site of the initial infection in the lung parenchyma.

Primary focus with tubercular hilar adenopathy/infection is a Ghon complex

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12
Q

IFNg release assay in TB

A

Can be used to detect TB infection.

T-cells release IFNg when exposed to TB antigen. WBCs are taken from the patient and mixed with antigens to test for IFNg release.

Do not get a false positive result if patient has had prior BCG

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13
Q

Mechanisms of drug resistance in TB

A

Arises from spontanous low frequency chromosomal mutations.

Inadequate treatment or poor adherenece produces a selection advantage for resistant mutants which rapidly multiply

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14
Q

Sites of extrapulmonary TB

A

Meningitis

Kidneys

Bone: lumosacral spine, causes vertebral collapse, nerve compression, psoas absess

Joints

GIT: malabsorption and peritonitis.

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