Tuberculosis Flashcards
What are the risk factors which can turn a primary infection of tuberculosis to an active disease?
- HIV
- TNFa
- IFNy
- Vitamin D
- immune immaturity/deterioration
What is the non infectious stage of TB?
primary disease
What is the infectious stage of TB?
- secondary disease due to endogenous re-activation
- secondary disease due to exogenous re-infection
What are the different tests of TB?
- tuberculin skin test
- interferon gamma release assays
- sputum smear microscopy
- sputum culture
- molecular tests (GeneXpert)
What are the symptoms of PTB?
- cough for 2-3 weeks, not responding to antibiotics
- sputum production (maybe with haemoptysis)
- fever
- night sweats
- weightloss
What are the advantages and disadvantages of sputum culture?
advantages:
- susceptibility testing
- additional 20-30% diagnostic yield
disadvantages:
- expensive
- slow
- biohazard
Describe the X-ray appearance of primary TB
Ghon complex:
- small (often calcified) focus of pulmonary infection
- asasociated lymphadenopathy
Describe the X-ray appearances of secondary TB
- cavitation
- miliary TB (primary/post-primary disease)
Rifampicin, its action and side effects
- inhibits bacterial DNA-dependent RNA polymerase
Side effects:
- hepatitis
- itch, rash, GI upset
- discolouration of urine, tears, swear
- induces liver enzymes increasing clearance of other drugs
- warfarin, OCP and anti-retroviral therapy interactions
Isoniazid, its action and side effects
- inhibits mycolic acid biosynthesis in cell wall
Side effects:
- hepatitis
- peripheral neuropathy
- resistance
Pyrazinamide, its action and side effects
- inhibits fatty acid synthase I
- hepatitis
- hyperuricemia
- can exacerbate gout
Ethambutamol, its action and side effects
- inhibits arabinosyn transferase
- optic neuritis
- usually added to regimen to help prevent resistance to other drugs
Describe the process of prescribing for TB
- intensive phase (2 months): rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, ethambutol
- continuation phase (4 months): rifampicin, isoniazid
What are the different mutations that can cause antibiotic resistance to anti-TB drugs?
- katG mutations
- inhA mutations
- rpoB mutations