This article was marked by its author as
Under construction
, but the last edit is older than 30 days.
If you want to edit this page, please try to contact its author first (you fill find him in the
history
). Watch the
discussion
as well. If the author will not continue in work, remove the template
{{Under construction}}
and
edit
the page.
Last update: Saturday, 02 Jan 2021 at 9.11 pm.
This article has been translated from WikiSkripta; ready for the
editor's review
.
Tuberculosis
(TB;
TBC in Czech
) encompasses all states of disease caused by the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex
Tuberculosis is a specific infectious disease that had already existed in ancient Greece and well as in the Roman empire.
Currently it is the most common lethal infectious disease in the world, about 20 million people are suffering from tuberculosis and about 3 million people die of it each year.
Tuberculosis continues to be a disease related to social status.
The most common
source
of the infection is a
person infected by tuberculosis
.
The term "tuberculosis" was introduced in the year 1834 by Scholein, but its etiology was discovered by Robert Koch.
The human tuberculosis is caused by
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
,
Mycobacterium bovis
and
Mycobacterium africanum
– altogether they are called the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex
.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
is an acidoresistant, alcaliresistant and alcoholresistant aerobic microbe that grows optimally in temperatures of 37–38 °C and has a long generation period, which necessitates cultivation on special culture media for 12 weeks.
Primáry tuberculosis
– appears after the first contact with mycobacterial infection. Under favorable circumstances,
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
enters the lungs, where it propagates and causes local exudative inflammatory reaction –
primary infect
. Within several hours, the
Mykobakterium tuberculosis
spreads by lymphatic means into regional lymph nodes which swell and along with the pulmonary inflammation they create the
primary tuberculous complex
.
Often the primary tuberculosis spreads from the tuberculous lymphadenitis, the "caseified" node perforates into the bronchus and allows the aspiratory spread of tuberculosis.
In 90% of all cases, the disease heals spontaneously as hypersensitivity to
tuberculin
appears.
Postprimary tuberculosis
– in persons already infected, affects the lungs most often.
A common form of postprimary tuberculosis is the Asmann-Redeker's early subclavicular infiltrate.
The infiltrate undergoes caseous necrosis after some time → spread of tuberculosis by aspiration.
It spreads further either directly into the surroundings, by expectoration or by the swallowing of sputum (tuberculous laryngitis, intestinal tuberculosis), by lymphatic vessels or by blood.
Exogenous infection
(reinfection in 30 %) – by inhalation of new mycobacteria during contact with the diseased.
Endogenous reactivation
of the primary tuberculosis while being weakened by malnourishment, pregnancy or by alcoholism.
Healing of lesions caused by postprimary tuberculosis is accompanied by the proliferation of collagenous ligament, scarring and by fibrotization of the pulmonary parenchyme.
Primary infection can progress without symptoms, in children it can rarely manifest by heightened temperature, loss of appetite and lowered activity.
Postprimary tuberculosis can progress asymptomatically as well or accompanied by uncharacteristic sneaking problems manifesting as a flu-like illness
Functional symptoms in most cases of TB manifest as notable tiredness,
loss of appetite
, loss of weight, lowered physical output, subfebrilia, night sweats, dry and later productive cough, mucoid or even mucopurulent sputum.
Isolation of 'Mycobacterium tuberculosis
from various materials (in pulmonary infections we examine the
sputum
, the
aspirate
obtained by bronchoalveaolar lavage, the
gastric aspirate
and sometimes the
laryngeal swab
in persons that cannot expectorate).
Microscopic examination
after special staining (
Ziehl-Neelsen
), it is possible to prove acidoresistant bacilli within 24 hours.
Cultivation examination
on different media is evaluated after 3 weeks at earliest, then after 6 and 9 weeks. The result is negative only when the Mycobacteria do not grow on the media even after 12 weeks.
meningitidic form
– confusion, slurred speech, headache, meningeal symptoms.
Diagnosis –
chest x-ray
– symmetrical spread of a shadow comprised of miliary loci (1 mm in diameter).
Tuberculous pneumonia
Begins suddenly, with shivers, fever, profound sweats, exhaustion and cough with purulent expectoration.
Only the formation of a cavern, nonexistent effect of antibiotics and a cultivation differentiating it from usual bacterial
pneumonia
lead to the correct diagnosis.
Primary resistance
– a strain resistant to a concrete drug in an otherwise sensitive mycobacterial species gained from the patient that has evidently never been treated with this drug before (1-2% in the CZ)).
Initial resistance
is a combination of primary resistance and undiscovered gained resistance, in case we can not rule out or confirm an earlier usage of the
antituberculotic drug
.
Gained (secondary) resistance
– originally a sensitive strain of
Mycobacterium
that has, during or after the treatment, become resistant to the drug that the patient had used for more than one month. Usually the result of an improper treatment.
Polyresistance
(multiple drug resistance,
MDR
) is a name for a state where the tuberculous mycobacteria became resistant to multiple antituberculotics, to isoniazid and rifampicin at minimum. It is the most severe form of bacterial resistance which manifests due to the improper usage of the therapeutic regimen.
Antituberculotics
Bactericidal – which kill the bacteria during cell division (nidrazid, rifampicin,
streptomycin
).
Sterilization effect – which kill the so-called "persister cells" (pyrazinamide, rifampicin).
Antituberculotics with bacteriostatic effect (ethambutol).
Rifampicin
(RMP, R)
Most effective bactericidal antibiotic, administered per os before breakfast in the morning at a dose of 450-600 mg.
It affects
Mycobacteria
with low metabolic activity.
Combined, prolonged and controlled as to prevent bacterial resistance.
Using the combination of at least 3 drugs in a single morning dose under the control of the nursing staff.
Hospital treatment (initial phase) is usually limited to 2 months, e.g. 2 months of the RHZ regimen, during which the infectiousness drops to minimum and eventually the drug interactions and side effects of the therapy are being considered. Following treatment (follow-up phase) is managed at a clinic either daily, e.g. 4 RH – 4 months of RH, or intermittently, e.g. 4 R3H3 – RH 3 times a week for 4 months.
Minimum length of the treatment of bacteriologically proven TB is 6 months, 4 months if unproven.
Dispensarization (a sum of measures which includes preventive methods, search and mandatory report, proper treatment, constant surveillance of health state and maintenance of the work ability).