Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis
DEFINITION
1. Pulmonary Tuberculosis
2. Extra pulmonary TB
TB involving organs other than lungs like pleura, lymph nodes, abdomen etc.
CLASSIFICATION BASED ON HISTORY OF PREVIOUS TREATMENT
1.New patients
No history of ever treated TB
2. Previously treated patients
Those patients who have received one month or more of anti TB drugs in the past. These are
a) Relapse patients: Treated for TB and declared cured or tx completed and
now diagnosed with recurrent episode of TB.
b) Treatment after failure patients: The pt who have previously txed for TB
and it is failed.
c) Tx after loss to follow up patients: The pts who have previously been
treated for TB and declared lost to follow up
d) Other previously treated pts: The pts who have previously treated for TB
but whose outcome after their most recent course of tx is unknown or
undocumented.
3. Pt with unknown previous TB tx history
DRUG RESISTANCE
a)Mono resistance: pts who are resistance to one first line anti TB drug only.
b)Polydrug resistance: Pts who are resistance to more than one first line anti TB
drug.
c) Multidrug resistance: Resistance to at least both isoniazid and rifampicin.
d)Extensive drug resistance: Resistance to any fluoroquinolones and to at least
one of three second line injectable drugs in addition to multidrug resistance.
e) Rifampicin Resistance: resistance to rifampicin detected with in or without
resistance to any anti TB drug
CLASSIFICATION BASED ON HIV STATUS
ETIOLOGY
Agent factors
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Source of infection
Human source: Human to human
Bovine source: Infected milk
Host factors
Age
Sex
Hereditary
Immunity
Mode of transmission
Droplet infection generated by sputum
Incubation Period
3-6 weeks
RISK FACTORS
. HIV and other conditions that impair the immune system
. Pt dependent on alcohol or other chemicals because of malnutrition,
debilitation and generally poor health
. Infants and children under the age of five years
. People with lifelong conditions such as DM or kidney diseases
. People who inject drugs
. Tobacco use
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
• 1. Initially present:
Fatigue, malaise, anorexia, unexplained weight loss, low grade fever, night sweat
2. Pulmonary manifestations
Cough, high fever, generalized flu like symptoms, pleuritic pain, productive cough
3. Breathlessness, chest pain
4. Weight loss
5. Extreme tiredness or fatigue
6. Enlargement of liver or spleen
7. Enlargement of lymphnodes
DIAGNOSTIC EVALUATION
1 Medical history
2 Physical Examination