Tuberculosis Flashcards
Tuberculosis (TB) Etiology/ causes?
Inhalation of droplets containing Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Primary TB Pathophysiology?
- TB bacilli are phagocytosed by alveolar macrophages,
- inducing a T-cell-mediated immune response.
- Macrophages and T cells kill most of bacilli,
- but a few residual bacilli lay dormant
in the Ghon complex (primary TB)
Secondary TB Pathophysiology?
Upon reinfection or immunosuppression, these organisms become activated
Complications from TB?
- TB may spread via lymphatics or blood and result in miliary TB
(seeding of distal organs) - other extrapulmonary TB manifestations (meningitis and Pott disease of the spine).
Primary TB gross fx?
- Ghon complex (lesion in upper part of lower lobe that becomes calcified);
- enlarged caseous hilar lymph nodes
Secondary TB gross fx?
- Tubercle formation (cavitary lesion) in lung apex or hilar lymph nodes;
- caseating granuloma made of epithelioid cells, fibroblasts, and giant cells
Primary TB clinical signs?
asymptomatic
Secondary TB clinical signs?
constitutive symptoms: fatigue, weight loss, fever, productive cough with hemoptysis
TB Lab findings?
Positive Mantoux/PPD test,
calcified Ghon complex on CXR,
acid-fast bacilli in sputum and confirmed by culture
TB Treatment?
Patient is first placed on a combination therapy of PIR for 2 months while tapering
down to RI for 4 more months
What does Mantoux/PPD test do?
Indicates delayed hypersensitivity after primary TB infection