Tuberculosis Flashcards
describe tuberculosis
caused by myobacterium tuberculosis bacterium
currently a global epidemic
describe M. tuberculosis
rod shaped bacillus gram postive acid fast characteristics slow growing member of genus myo-bacterium due to fungal like growth on solid media
describe TB infection
transmission is via aerosol route
exposure to TB-infected individuals results in infection in ~10% cases
vaccine not very effective - the RD1 genomic segment of M. TB is absent from all strains of BCG vaccine
most common in 25-34 year olds
majority of TB disease is re-activated disease in individuals previously entering the country with latent TB infection
describe elimination of TB
identify and effectively treat accurate TB
identify and treat people with latent TB infection at risk of progression to accurate TB
left untreated, the disease will progress to eventually involve most of the lung bilaterally (milairy TB)
describe symptoms of TB
constitutional
organ specific - pulmonary, extra-pulmonary (spinal cord, brain)
describe signs of TB
generalised
organ specific - pulmonary, extra-pulmonary (spinal cord, brain)
describe how the host’s immune response largely shapes the clinical outcome of TB
*as list progresses, more effective immune response (time also affects the disease)* miliary meningeal pulmonary (widespread) pulmonary (localised) localised extra-pulmonary lymph node healthy contact (latent TB infection)
describe the diagnosis of TB
history and examination
simple blood test
radiology/imaging
microbiology and histology;
specimens - sputum, gastric washings, bronchoalveolar lavage, early morning urine, biopsies
procedures - microscopy (Ziehl-Neelsen and Auramine)
culture - solid and liquid phase, drug sensitivities
histology - granuloma with central caseous necrosis (cheesy)
describe treatment of drug-sensitive TB
active;
4 drugs for 2 months; rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, ethambutol
2 drugs for further 4 months; rifampicin, isoniazid
latent;
2 drugs for 3 months; rifampicin, isoniazid
or 1 drug for 6 months; isoniazid
describe the immune response to M. TB
the macrophage is the initial intracellular primary niche of M. TB
- phagocytosis (macrophage, dendritic cell, neutrophil)
- immune recognition and innate effector mechanisms (anti-mycobacterial effector functions)
- (slow) onset of Th1-biased adaptive immunity (MTB-specific CD4+ T cell and CD8+). This is key to successful anti-TB immune response. Individuals with defective CMI (HIV or chronic renal failure) are not defective humoral immunity and exhibit markedly increased risk of TB
- enhanced effector mechanisms (more effective immune response)
describe diagnosis of latent TB infection
ESAT-6 and CFP-10 are potent targets of IFN-gamma secreting T cells in TB
describe diagnosis of active TB
sensitivity of 3 samples
may be sensitive as a culture