Mycobacteria: What Has Been The Epidemiology of Tuberculosis Since The 1990's in 'Developed' Countries?
Mycobacteria: What Has Been The Epidemiology of Tuberculosis Since The 1990's in 'Developed' Countries?
Mycobacteria: What Has Been The Epidemiology of Tuberculosis Since The 1990's in 'Developed' Countries?
4. Poor surveillance programmes - here patients may not be followed up for various
reasons resulting in poor compliance with treatment regimes leading possibly to spread
of TB and emergence of resistance.
5. Poverty, overcrowding and malnutrition.
6. Increasing immigration of foreign-born nationals from areas of high incidence.
You answered:
The correct answer is: Over the last two decades, there has been a decline in overall numbers.
However, in the last 2-3 years the decline may have halted due to an increasingly elderly
patient population, better diagnosis and notifications, and increased immigration of foreign-born
nationals to Ireland from Eastern Europe and Africa.
Progressive infiltration of macrophages from the local tissues and the blood. The
macrophages are responsible for the destruction of the organism.
Macrophages phagocytose the bacilli. In a short time the appearance of the
macrophages change. The cytoplasm becomes pale and eosinophilic, and their nuclei
elongate and become vesicular. Their appearance bears a resemblance to epithelial
cells, hence the name "epithelioid cells."
Some macrophages fuse to become Langhans giant cells, i.e. nuclei disposed around
the periphery of the cell in a horse-shoe or ring arrangement.
Surrounding this mass of altered macrophages, there is a wide zone of small round cells,
mostly lymphocytes and fibroblasts.
Histologically, the necrosis is structureless and eosinophilic. Caseation would appear to
be caused by allergy to products of the bacillus - tuberculoprotein.
NB: Please consult Pathology lectures and notes also.
What is the source of M bovis and how is it transmitted?
You answered:
The correct answer is: The source is infected cattle and spread is generally by ingestion of milk
containing tubercle bacilli from tuberculous cows. Other animals e.g. dogs, cats and pigs may
become infected with M. bovis.
OR
3. Widespread extension with massive caseation and death
However, usually the disease remains localised to the lungs, bloodstream invasion is unusual,
and lymph node involvement does not occur, unlike with primary TB.
Back
What happens when the intestine is involved?
This usually arises when the patient swallows his or her own infected sputum. Lesions arise
and ulcerate in to the wall of the ileum. The following may happen: 1. Local spread causing localised peritonitis.
2. Strictures.
3. Fistulae.
Involvement of local lymph nodes is minimal.
Involvement of local lymph nodes is minimal.
You answered:
The correct answer is: These are mycobacteria, which have varying degrees of pathogenicity
for humans. The vast majority are found in the environment and when they do cause infections
in man, they are not readily transmitted from person to person, hence they are not considered
infectious like TB.
There are a large number of these atypicals but the majority are incapable of producing serious
disease.
You answered:
The correct answer is: LJ slopes turn an orange colour after exposure to light for one hour.
(such atypical mycobacteria are called photochromogens
What category of infection does it cause?
The correct answer is: It usually produces a pulmonary infection resembling tuberculosis on Xray and is seen more commonly in middle-aged men with a history of chronic bronchitis. It is
common in tropical and sub-tropical countries and may invade the bloodstream in those who
are immunosuppressed and produce disseminated disease.
What approaches are there to making a diagnosis of TB, and briefly describe each one.
These involve:
Clinical suspicion
Skin tests
Blood tests
Microbiology laboratory investigations
Radiology
Tissue diagnosis or histology
These are based on a delayed hypersensitivity reaction (Type IV) to protein derivative of
TB. They are less useful diagnostically in those countries where BCG vaccination (see
below) is routine. Intradermal injection of the purified protein derivative (PPD) of M.
(iii) is suffering at the time of the injection from infection with M. tuberculosis.
If negative on first testing, a stronger concentration of PPD is used, and this may produce
a positive reaction. If then negative, the patient has never been infected with
mycobacteria. Other possible but much less common explanations for a negative test
are:
(iii) Immunosuppressed persons, the best example being AIDS where T cell activity is
greatly diminished.
Laboratory Diagnosis
Specimens will depend on site of tuberculous lesion within the body. Always send
multiple specimens. Swabs are unreliable; pus, tissue or fluids are far superior.
Meningitis: CSF
Investigations
PCR in certain areas is used to confirm a ZN +ve result due to M. tuberculosis and not
another species, or where microscopy is negative, e.g. TB meningitis.
Consists of a live attenuated strain of M.. bovis attenuated by growing it on bile-potato medium.
Produces delayed-type hypersensitivity response similar to that caused by natural infection and
vaccinated person will become tuberculin-positive six weeks after vaccine. It is used in Ireland
but not in many other countries such as the USA, where therefore skin testing is more useful as a
diagnostic tool.
NB: BCG vaccine is never given to persons who are tuberculin test positive.
While the disease presentation may be different these patients are highly infectious for
others e.g. those living with them or those caring for them.
As with other opportunist infections, the frequency of TB in HIV/AIDS has changed, with
the onset of improved anti-retroviral treatment
(b) Here the patients are infected with tubercle bacilli for the first time. Those unvaccinated will
develop primary childhood-type disease. In those who have been vaccinated with BCG, disease
may present with many of the features described in reactivated tuberculosis above.
In countries where primary tuberculosis is still common e.g. parts of Africa, reactivation of
disease and AIDS infection are common e.g. it is estimated that 2 - 4 million people in SubSaharan Africa are co-infected with tuberculosis and AIDS.
In the early 1990s, MDRTB emerged in New York city due to
poor compliance
slow response to treatment
inadequate public health measures such as isolation and contact tracing