Tuberculosis

 Tuberculosis (TB) is a disease caused bybacteria called Mycobacterium Tuberculosis that are spread from person to person through the air. TB usually affects the lungs, but it can also affect other parts of the body, such as the brain, the kidneys, or the spine, bone, tissues etc.
TB is treatable and curable with timely and proper medical management.

A look at public statistics!!

TB has spread its tentacles across the world
Annual prevalence and death data erstimates revealed by
the WHO are alarming
10 millions
new cases
1.6 millions
deaths
558,000 MDR-TB*
cases
30 high-burden countries incidence rates, 2017
Estimates, new cases per 100,000 population

TB has also ravaged India.

As of 2018, India was home to the world’s largest number of patients suffering from TB. And at 2.74 million reported cases every year, India has the world’s highest share of all TB cases.

China lags far behind at only 1 million cases per year.
To counter this, the National Strategic Plan (NSP) 2017-2025 was set up under the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Program (RNTCP). The stated aim was complete elimination of the disease by 2025.
However, since 2016, India’s TB incidence has dropped by a mere 1.7 percent annually. This has been a matter of concern and there is a dire need to raise the levels of awareness among Indians regarding Tb and to run large scale detection and treatment drives.
https://thediplomat.com/2019/04/tuberculosis-indias-silent-epidemic/

TB has also ravaged India.

TB spreads through direct close contact with someone who is infected with the disease. TB can be passed off to another healthy person as an air-based droplet infection.

When coughing, sneezing, and laughter, the patient with an open form of tuberculosis emits small droplets of phlegm containing tubercle bacilli into the air. which arescattered around at a distance of up to 1.5 m and are kept in air in the form of a suspension up to 30 minutes.

TB bacteria become lighter in weight due to water loss
(The size of a bacteria after water loss will be several microns)
Ref: Adapted from Japan Anti Tuberculosis Association (2007)

Modes of TB transmission

Ref: Adapted from Critical Reviews in Therapeutic Drug Carrier Systems, 29(4), 299-353 (2012)

Signs and Symptoms

Types of TB disease

Pulmonary TB or TB of the lungs – The most common site of infection for TB are the lungs. This is a highly contagious form of TB, if the patient is not under effective medical therapy.

Extra pulmonary TB – TB can occur in several other parts of the body. Extra pulmonary TB is also a serious infection and requires urgent medical attention. The common sites of the body that can get involved in this form of TB have been shown below:

Have you also heard about multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB)? – A form of TB that does not respond to the most potent TB drugs
Multidrug-resistant TB (MDR TB) is caused by an organism that is resistant to at least isoniazid and rifampin, the two most potent TB drugs. These drugs are used to treat all persons with TB disease
But MDR TB is not the end of the story, TB has assumed an even more ferocious and aggressive form, “The XDR type of TB or simply XDR TB”- Perhaps the most resistant form of TB that is non-responsive to several TB medications
Extensively drug resistant TB (XDR TB) is a rare type of MDR TB that is resistant to isoniazid and rifampin, plus any fluoroquinolone and at least one of three injectable second-line drugs (i.e., amikacin, kanamycin, or capreomycin).
Because XDR TB is resistant to the most potent TB drugs, patients are left with treatment options that are much less effective.

MDR and XDR TB are a major concern for HIV positive patients

XDR TB is of special concern for persons with HIV infection or other conditions that can weaken the immune system. These persons are more likely to develop TB disease once they are infected, and also have a higher risk of death once they develop TB.

Ref: Adapted from https://www.cdc.gov/tb/publications/factsheets/drtb/mdrtb.htm

Drug Resistance has become a huge menace in the management of TB

Drug resistance is more common in people who

Ref:Adapted from https://www.cdc.gov/tb/publications/factsheets/drtb/mdrtb.htm

The clinical suspicion of TB begins with the symptoms. symptoms and the personal and medical history of the patient. Often TB outside the lungs, may present as a lump or an overgrowth. In the case of TB of the lungs, the doctor would want to take a radiograph (X-ray) of the lungs, perform certain lab tests on the sputum of the patient and if need be more advanced investigations like a bronchoscopy, testing of lung fluid, biopsy / CT scan may also be advised. A sputum culture is often the confirmatory test for TB of the lungs.

In case of TB suspected in areas other than the lung, the doctor may want to perform certain lab tests like the TB PCR or GeneXpert. This in addition to certain lab tests like blood culture which can confirm TB. A CT scan of the involved area may also be advised,

TB can be treated with antibacterial drugs. Around 10 such antibacterials have been approved for use by the FDA. The most common ones are isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol and pyrizinamine. These are called as first line drugs. In addition to these, there are other higher anti bacterials that are given to patients that do not respond to these drugs, especially those patients who are also HIV positive or those who have a drug resistant form of TB. While your doctor perform culture tests to diagnose TB through a blood sample, the culture report can also tell your doctor the specific drugs that would work in your case. In this way, the drugs suitable for every patient can be tailored from case to case, depending on the culture report.

The goal of treatment is to cure the infection with medicines that fight the TB bacteria. Active pulmonary TB is treated with a combination of many medicines (usually 4 medicines)
You may need to take many different pills at different times of the day for 6 months or longer. It is very important that you take the pills the way your provider instructed.
Non compliance to treatment can cause the TB to become worse, more aggressive and give rise to complications. You may need to stay at home or be admitted to a hospital for 2 to 4 weeks to avoid spreading the disease to others until you are no longer contagious.
Ensure that you take the BCG vaccine:
• 80% effective in preventing TB for 15 years
• more effective against complex forms of TB inchildren
• of limited effectiveness in people over the age of 35
• less effective when given in equatorial regions (due to high levels of naturally occurring environmental mycobacteria)
Early diagnosis:
Several government agencies and NGOs have been running mass scale programs across the country to ensure that TB gets detected at early stages among people. Early diagnosis, correct diagnosis leads to early treatment initiation which can go a long way in reducing the burden of TB.
Effect of the surrounding environment

• Good ventilation: As TB can remain suspended in the air for several hours with no ventilation
• Natural light: UV light kills off TB bacteria
• Good hygiene: covering the mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing reduces the spread of TB bacteria
• Use of protective masks, ventilation systems, keeping potentially infectious patients separate from other patients, and the regular screening of healthcare providers

A healthy immune system
Having a healthy immune system is the best form of defence against TB: 60% of adults with a healthy immune system can completely kill TB bacteria.

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