Tuberculosis Flashcards
What are key features of tuberculosis?
- Caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Most commonly affects lung
- Can be primary or secondary
What is primary TB?
- Non-immune host who is exposed to M. tuberculosis may develop primary infection of lungs
- Small lung lesion known as ‘Ghon focus’ develops
- Ghon focus → tubercle-laden macrophages
- Combo of Ghon focus + hilar lymph nodes = Ghon complex
- In immunocompetent people → initially lesion heals by fibrosis
- Immunocompromised → may develop disseminated disease (miliary TB)
What is secondary (post-primary) TB?
- If host becomes immunocompromised, initial infection reactivated
- Reactivation occurs in apex of lungs + may spread locally or to distant sites
- Causes of immunocompromise → drugs (steroids), HIV, malnutrition
- Lungs remain most common site for 2o TB
What are extra-pulmonary sites for secondary TB infection?
- CNS → tuberculosis meningitis (most serious complication)
- Vertebral bodies → Pott’s disease
- Cervical lymph nodes → scrofuloderma
- Renal
- GI Tract
What is the pathology of tuberculosis?
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Macrophages often migrate to regional lymph nodes
- Lung lesion + affected lymph nodes = Ghon complex
- Leads to formation of granuloma (collection of epithelioid histiocytes)
- Presence of caseous necrosis in centre
- Inflammatory response mediated by type 4 hypersensitivity reaction
- In healthy individuals, disease may be contained
- In immunocompromised → disseminated (miliary TB) may occur
How is tuberculosis screened for?
- Mantoux test screens for latent TB
- Interferon-gamma blood test also introduced
- Mantoux test → injected intradermally, result read 2-3d later
- False negatives → miliary TB, sarcoidosis, HIV, lymphoma, <6months age
- Heaf test prev used in UK but since discontinued, was read 3-10d later
What does CXR show for active tuberculosis?
- Classical finding of reactivated TB → upper lobe cavitation
- Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy
What is the investigation of choice for TB?
- Sputum smear
- 3 specimens needed
- Rapid + inexpensive test
- Stained for presence of acid-fast bacilli → Ziehl-Neelsen stain
- All mycobacteria will stain positive
- Sensitivity 50-80%, reduced in individuals w/ HIV to around 20-30%
What is the gold standard investigation for TB?
- Sputum culture
- More sensitive than sputum spear + NAAT
- Can assess drug sensitivities
- Can take 1-3 weeks if using liquid media, longer if solid media
What is NAAT?
- Another investigation for TB
- Nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT)
- Allows rapid diagnosis within 24-48hrs
- More sensitive than smear but less sensitive than culture
What are risk factors for developing active tuberculosis?
- Silicosis
- Chronic renal failure
- HIV positive
- Solid organ transplantation w/ immunosuppression
- IV drug use
- Haem malignancy
- Anti-TNF treatment
- Prev gastectomy
What is the treatment for latent tuberculosis?
Two choices from NICE:
- 3 months isoniazid (w/ pyridoxine) + rifampicin, or
- 6 months of isoniazid (w/ pyridoxine)
NICE Reasoning → Base the choice of regimen on the person’s clinical circumstances. Offer:
- 3 months isoniazid (w/ pyridoxine) + rifampacin to < 35yrs if hepatotoxicity is a concern after an assessment of both LFTs and risk factors
- 6 months of isoniazid (w/ pyridoxine) if interactions w/ rifamycins are a concern, if example, in ppl w/ HIV or transplant pts
What is the standard therapy for treating active TB?
- Initially: first 2 months → rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide + ethambutol
- Continuation: next 4 months → rifampicin + isoniazid
Which groups is direct observed therapy (3 times a week dosing regimen) indicated in?
- Homeless people w/ active TB
- Pts who are likely to have poor concordance
- All prisoners w/ active or latent TB
What are TB drug side-effects?
- Rifampicin → red-orange secretions, hepatitis, flu-like symptoms
- Isoniazid → peripheral neuropathy (prevent w/ pyridoxine/Vit B6), agranulocytosis, hepatitis
- Pyrazinamide → hyperuricaemia, arthralgia, myalgia, hepatitis
- Ethambutol → colour blindness, optic neuritis