There is a *great* free resource called the Canadian Tuberculosis Standards available here.
First we talked about the diagnosis and treatment of latent tuberculosis infection.
Diagnosis:
- Positive mantoux test
- Interpret in context of patient's history
- less than 5mm - negative (or false negative in immunosuppressed or very ill patient)
- 5mm-10mm - HIV, close contact with known case, chest xray evidence of old TB as fibronodular disease, children, immunosuppression (chemo, TNF alpha, high dose steroids)
- Greater than 10 - positive for all others
- Increase in 6 from previous known positive.
- BCG -- only consider BCG as the cause of a TST if it was given after 12 months of age to a patient from a low risk country and does not have radiographic evidence of old TB
- Interpret in context of patient's history
- Can consider inferferon based assay, though this is not the standard
- Evidence of prior tuberculosis on imaging
- No evidence of active disease
- Tend to treat people who are at the highest risk of re-activating or those with the lowest risk of drug side-effects
- High risk includes: HIV, organ transplant, TNF alpha inhibitors and other immunosuppression
- Risk in health normal person is ~ 5% in first 2 years and 10% over the lifetime
- Immigration and reactivation risk
- INH 300mg PO OD x 9 months with Vitamin B6 25mg po OD
- Alternative (not as good): RIFAMPIN 600mg po OD x 4 months
Diagnosis:
Acute to subacute illness (2/3 present less than 1 month) with fever, pleuritic chest pain, minimally productive cough. Unilateral effusion.
- Exudative effusion
- pH usually ~ 7.4
- Glucose usually normal
- Lymphocytic pleocytosis (though can be neutrophils early)
- Usually less than 5% mesothelial cells
- AFB stain less than 10%
- Culture ~ 30% (yield may improve by inoculating into special culture media)
- PCR positive in 90-100% of culture positive but only 30-60% of culture negative
- Sputum positive in ~ 50%
- Pleural biopsy shows either granulomas or AFB or is culture positive in up to 95%
- INH, RIF, ETH (add PZA if sputum positive, sick, bilateral effusions, other extrapulmonary disease) x 2 months then if INF/RIF sensitive INF/RIF to complete 6 months
- Adjuvant steroids are not clearly indicated
- Effusion may take up to 6 months post treatment to resolve.
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