Tuberculosis
目次
History
- Died from or infected by Tb
- John Keats (poet)
- George O'well
- Nelson Mandella
- Hippocrates description
- Phthisis (to waste away, consumption)
- Robert Koch found the bacteria 1882
Epidemiology
est. case est. death all form 10mil 1.4mil HIV-ass 0.9 mil 208,000 MDR-Tb ≈558,000 ≈190,000
- 8 countries account for 2/3 of all worldwide Tb
- India
- China
- Indonesia
- the Phillippines
- Pakistan
- Nigeria
- Bangladesh
- South Africa
Transmission
- transmission-influencing factors
- sputum status of index case
- proximity - distance between each other
- time
- susceptibility of person
- [math]\displaystyle{ R_0 \approx r \times c \times d }[/math]
- [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math] = transmissibility
- to reduce [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math]
- ealier detection
- rapid commencing of treatment
- reduce aerolization (surgical masks on patients)
- surgical masks on patients reduce infectivity by 56%
- to reduce [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math]
- [math]\displaystyle{ c }[/math] = susceptibility of contacts
- to reduce [math]\displaystyle{ c }[/math]
- open windows
- Tb airborne transmission risk: windows closed 97%, negative pressure room (ACH12) 39%, windows and doors fully open 33%
- N95 respirator
- ARTs for HIV patients
- open windows
- to reduce [math]\displaystyle{ c }[/math]
- [math]\displaystyle{ d }[/math] = duration of infectivity
- to reduce [math]\displaystyle{ d }[/math]
- treat patients appropriately
- to reduce [math]\displaystyle{ d }[/math]
- [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math] = transmissibility
Risk factors
- HIV
- malnutrition
- Tb risk inversely correlates with BMI
- diabetes
- diabetes and Tb are syndemic
- diabetes and Tb pathophysiologically exacerbate each other even under treatment condition in terms of hepatotoxicity
- overcrowding
- people per room vs Tb rate per 100,000 (in Canada)
- 0.4-0.6 vs 18.9
- 1.0-1.2 vs 113
- people per room vs Tb rate per 100,000 (in Canada)
- ....
Natural history
- inhalation of M.tb containing droplets
- macrophages phagocytosis
- granuloma + lymphadenopathy
- Ghon complex - primary infection
- 5% local progression/disseminated Tb
- 95% latent Tb
- 10% of latent Tb reactivates in lifetime - secondary Tb
Latent Tb
- 1/3 of the world's population have latent Tb
- modelling approx. 1.7 bil. people
- 10% of those latent Tb people get reactivation in their lifetime
Symptoms
- cough ± sputum ± hemoptysis > 2weeks
- fever
- malaise
- weight loss
Various presentations
pulmonary
- 80-85% of TB diagnosis are pulmonary
extra-pulmonary
lymphadenitis - hilar/other
- cold abscess
- more common in cervical and hilar
- possibly in axillar, inguinal and abdominal
- hilar adenitis DDx - sarcoidosis, lymphoma, histoplasmosis
pleural
- usually uni-lateral
- effusion high LDH, high protein, high lymphocyte
pericardial
- cardiac tamponade
- sequele - carcified pericardium
intestinal
- can mimic Crohn's disease
- most common in ileocecal
meningitis
- often involves 3rd and 6th cranial nerves
- meningeal irritation signs often unaccompanied
cerebral tuberculoma
- DDx primary CNS lymphoma
Pott's disease (vertebral destruction due to TB)
- kyphosis, gibbus formation
- sometimes extends to psoas muscle abscess;
arthritis
- synovial fluid does not necessarily contains enough TB bacteria; fluid culture may miss diagnosis
- IGRA could be clue
=skin
- erythema nodosum
- DDx - TB, cryptococcal, sarcoidosis, UC, oral contraceptive, ≈50% idiopathic
- lupus vulgaris
- ......
- miliary TB
- massive lymphohematogenous dissemination
- nodules diameter <10mm
- liver
- spleen
- bone marrow
- lungs
- pulmonary miliary TB easily missed by chest X-ray
- meninges
- massive lymphohematogenous dissemination