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OVERVIEW OF TUBERCULOSIS

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... HIV, abnormal CXR = tuberculosis (atypical CXR) Why are lesions atypical in AIDS? ... CXR - apical lesions (CXR atypical AIDS) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: OVERVIEW OF TUBERCULOSIS


1
OVERVIEW OF TUBERCULOSIS
  • Shehla P Islam
  • Assistant Professor
  • UF- Division of Infectious Diseases
  • October 27, 2009.

2
Clinical Presentation
  • Mr. WC is a 42 yo WM homeless alcoholic Eastern
    European immigrant CC. Cough with yellow
    sputum x 3 mo
  • 3 mo PTA he began feeling poorly and stopped
    drinking. He began noting fever and night sweats
  • 2 mo PTA he noted increased cough productive of
    yellow sputum
  • 2 weeks PTA he realized he had lost nearly 30 lbs
  • PE Temp 39C, BP 112/58, HR 88 RR 24Very thin,
    chronically ill appearing. Lungs - normal breath
    sounds without rales or rhonchi, no post-tussic
    ralesExtremities - clubbing

3
Questions you should be asking yourself?
  • How ill is he? Is this an emergency?
  • How did he contract this infection?
  • Did he have risk factors that predisposed him to
    infection?
  • Do his symptoms help you to decide the cause of
    his pulmonary infection?
  • What tests should I order?
  • What is the most likely cause?
  • How should I treat him?

4
Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Microbiology
  • Higher bacterium
  • Possibly evolved from M.bovis in Indo-Europeans
  • Slow growing
  • Lowenstein Jensen Media Usually 4-6 wks to grow
  • Not seen on Gram stain.
  • Acid-fast---appears red with Acid Fast staining

5
M.Tuberculosis Epidemiology
  • Humans only reservoir
  • Person-to-person spread via aerosolized
    infectious droplets following sneezing or
    coughing.
  • Some patients more infectious

6
DISEASE BURDEN
  • In 2005, there were 9 million new cases in the
    world, with 1.6 million deaths from it.
  • Estimated 10-15 million persons in U.S. infected
    with M. tuberculosis
  • Without intervention, about 10 will develop TB
    disease at some point in life

7
M.Tuberculosis Epidemiology
  • Which group is most commonly presents with TB in
    the US?
  • Immigrants from developing nations
  • The urban poor
  • Alcoholics
  • Single males
  • IV drug abusers

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10
PERSONS AT HIGHER RISK OF DEVELOPING TB DISEASE
ONCE INFECTED
  • HIV infected
  • Recently infected
  • Persons with certain medical conditions
  • Persons who inject illicit drugs
  • History of inadequately treated TB

11
Mycobacterium TuberculosisPathogenesis
  • The lipid wall resists drying and many
    disinfectants
  • Macrophages carry to the lymph nodes Survive
    within macrophages for years
  • Cell mediated immune response.
  • Caseating granulomascell mediated immune
    response lipid-rich bacteria
  • Increased levels of IL-1 cause fever
  • Increased levels of TNF cause weight loss

12
EVALUATION FOR TB
  • Medical history
  • Physical examination
  • Mantoux tuberculin skin test
  • Chest radiograph
  • Bacteriologic or histologic exam

13
MEDICAL HISTORY
  • Symptoms of disease
  • History of TB exposure, infection, or disease
  • Past TB treatment
  • Demographic risk factors for TB
  • Medical conditions that increase risk for TB
  • disease

14
GENERAL SYMPTOMS OF TB
  • Fever
  • Chills
  • Night sweats
  • Appetite loss
  • Weight loss
  • Easy fatigability

15
FOCAL SYMPTOMS depend on site
  • COMMON SITES
  • Lungs
  • Pleura
  • Central nervous system
  • Lymphatic system
  • Genitourinary systems
  • Bones and joints
  • Disseminated (miliary TB)

16
PULMONARY SYMPTOMS
  • Productive, prolonged cough
  • (duration of 3 weeks or more)
  • Chest pain
  • Hemoptysis

17
Diagnosis of TB
  • Zeil Nielson acid fast stain can detect 1 x 104
    organisms/ml, 60 sensitivity
  • 3 negative smears to assure low infectivity (Does
    this exclude TB?)
  • Culture most sensitive and specific test.
  • PCR
  • PPD

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20
Clinical Forms of TB
  • Primary
  • Secondary or Reactivation
  • Miliary

21
Primary TB
  • First exposure
  • Inhalation followed by a flu-like illness
  • Bacteremia develops can silently seed multiple
    sites in the body.
  • The bacteria take hold in specific sites in the
    body.
  • 4-8 weeks cell-mediated immunity
  • May see a Ghon complex

22
Primary TB
23
Clinical Presentation
  • Pt A is a 42 yo WM homeless alcoholic Eastern
    European immigrant CC. Cough with yellow
    sputum x 3 mo
  • 3 mo PTA he began feeling poorly and stopped
    drinking. He began noting fever and night sweats
  • 2 mo PTA he noted increased cough productive of
    yellow sputum
  • 2 weeks PTA he realized he had lost nearly 30 lbs
  • PE Temp 39C, BP 112/58, HR 88 RR 24Very thin,
    chronically ill appearing. Lungs - normal breath
    sounds without rales or rhonchi, no post-tussic
    ralesExtremities - clubbing

24
Pt A Initial CXR
Extensive left upper lobe disease, RUL as well
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26
What type of tuberculosis does this man have?
  • Primary tuberculosis
  • Cancer with an incidental positive AFB smear
  • Sarcoidosis
  • Miliary tuberculosis
  • Secondary tuberculosis

27
Secondary Tuberculosis
  • Reactivation occurs in 10-15 of patients 1/2
    within 2 years of primary disease
  • Usually an Apical infection
  • Most commonly males 30-50 yo

28
Secondary Tuberculosis
  • Slowly Progressive (several months)
  • Worsening cough with sputum production
  • Low grade fever, night sweats, fatigue and weight
    loss
  • Hemoptysis or pleuritic pain are rare (seen only
    in severe disease)

29
Secondary Tuberculosis
  • PE minimal findings, post tussic rales
  • CXR apical cavities (without fluid), apical
    lordotic CT scan often helpful
  • Cavitary disease very infectious. Why?
  • Isolate all patients.
  • In HIV, abnormal CXR tuberculosis (atypical
    CXR) Why are lesions atypical in AIDS?

30
PT A Initial CXR
Extensive left upper lobe disease, RUL as well
31
PT A2 weeks into Rxminimal change
32
Pt A - 3 months into RX scarring LUL
33
Cavitary TB
34
Who is at highest risk for disseminated
tuberculosis? (Miliary TB)
  • Teenagers exposed to TB for the first time
  • Elderly patients with a past history of Tb
    exposure
  • Young children exposed to TB for the first time
  • HIV patients with a past history of TB exposure.
  • Middle aged single men with a 1st exposure to TB

35
Miliary TB
  • Mycobacterial infection not controlled.
  • Persistent dissemination occurs with primary
    disease and occasionally with reactivation
  • See in patients with depressed cell-mediated
    immunity

36
Miliary TB Clinical Manifestations
  • Symptoms are nonspecific
  • Children - High fever Night
    sweats Weight loss
    Hepatosplenomegally Lymphadenopathy
  • Adults - Moderate to low grade fever Night
    sweats Malaise and anorexia Weakness Weight
    loss

37
Miliary TB Diagnosis Treatment
  • Funduscopic exam - choroid tubercles
  • Laboratory - leukemoid reaction anemia low
    serum Na abnormal LFTs
  • CXR - Micronodular interstitial pattern (millet
    seeds) Normal elderly and HIV patients. Why?

38
Miliary TB
39
Miliary TB Diagnosis Treatment
  • Diagnosis - blood cultures transbronchial
    biopsy bone marrow culture and pathology
    Liver biopsy
  • Treatment - Early therapy for all suspected cases
    (4 drugs)

40
Isolate All Suspected TB patients
41
ISOLATION AND PERSONAL RESP PROTECTION
A negative pressure room and the N-95
respirator will be fine!!!
42
Isolate All Suspected TB patients
  • Negative pressure room
  • Masks that remove microdroplets
  • Contact Infection Control
  • PPD for all exposed individuals
  • Importance of identifying 2ndary cases
  • AFB smear directly correlates with infectiousness

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44
Treatment of TB
  • 1/ 106 organisms naturally resistant to one
    drug.Calculate how many organisms it would take
    to select for a bacteria resistant to 2 drugs.
  • 106
  • 108
  • 1010
  • 1012
  • 1014

45
Treatment of TB
  • 4-drug regimen pending sensitivity testing
  • -1/ 106 organisms naturally resistant to one
    drug- Cavitary lesions have 109-1010
    organisms- Two drugs sufficient
  • - However, primary INH resistance common. INH
    resistance associated with poorer outcome.
  • - Primary cidal agent, therefore to prevent
    resistance
  • INH, rifampin, pyrazinimide, ethambutol

46
Use multiple drugs to which the organisms are
susceptible
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48
Non-adherence is a major problem in TB treatment
49
Treatment of TB
  • INH-resistance is now common.
  • Multi-drug resistance is most common in parts of
    Eastern Europe, Africa, and HIV pos pts.
  • As a public health official how would reduce the
    incidence of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis?

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51
Treatment of TB
  • Directly observed therapy (DOT)
  • Now the treatment of choice
  • Involves high does of anti-tuberculosis drugs
    twice a week
  • Has markedly reduced
  • The incidence of drug resistance TB
  • The over all incidence of TB in the US

52
Prevention of TB
  •  It seems that if humans are the only reservoir
    for TB and it is spread by aerosolized droplets,
    than it should be a disease targeted for
    eradication.  Once again, I understand that
    because it afflicts developing nations where
    people live in crowded quarters this is not a
    particularly lucrative investment for
    pharmaceutical companies.  But what are the
    efforts of the WHO with regards to this and what
    kinds of improvements have been made so far, if
    any?

53
Prevention of TB
  • TB is strictly spread from person to person.
  • Need to Identify exposed individuals and prevent
    them from developing active disease
  • Skin test can often accomplish this task
  • Test only those in whom there is an identified
    risk

54
What is the meaning of a reactive PPD?
  • You have active tuberculosis and need immediate
    treatment
  • You have been exposed to tuberculosis and need to
    take INH to prevent active disease
  • Your reactive PPD may be a false positive
    depending on where you come from.
  • A reactive PPD has no meaning if you have
    received a BCG vaccination

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57
Reading the Tuberculin Skin Test
  • Read reaction 48-72 hours after injection
  • Measure only induration
  • Record reaction in millimeters

58
Classifying the Tuberculin Reaction
  • 5 mm is classified as positive in
  • HIV-positive persons
  • Recent contacts of TB case
  • Persons with fibrotic changes on chest radiograph
  • consistent with old healed TB
  • Patients with organ transplants and other
  • immunosuppressed patients

59
Classifying the Tuberculin Reaction (cont.)
  • 15 mm is classified as positive in
  • Persons with no known risk factors for TB
  • Targeted skin testing programs should only be
    conducted among high-risk groups

60
Classifying the Tuberculin Reaction (cont.)
  • 10 mm is classified as positive in
  • Recent arrivals from high-prevalence countries
  • Injection drug users
  • Residents and employees of high-risk congregate
    settings
  • Mycobacteriology laboratory personnel
  • Persons with clinical conditions that place them
    at high risk
  • Children lt4 years of age, or children and
    adolescents
  • exposed to adults in high-risk categories

61
Prevention of TB
  • PPD 5 TU carefully standardized
  • Positive test exposure in the past
  • Negative to positive conversion

62
Prevention of TB
  • INH Prophylaxis (INH 300 mg QD x 9 mo)
  • Who should receive prophylaxis? All individuals
    with a positive PPD?
  • Problem of hepatotoxicity. Increases in those
    over 35 y. Need to follow LFTs monthly
  • What test should be ordered in all patients with
    a positive PPD?

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64
TB Conclusions
  • - Primary
  • - Miliary
  • - Secondary
  • A chronic disease - Weight loss, fever
  • AFB smear critical to determine infectiousness
    (importance of isolation)
  • CXR - apical lesions (CXR atypical AIDS)
  • Treatment - 4 drugs to start to prevent selection
    of resistance and DOT
  • Prevention depends on PPD INH prophylaxis

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