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Tuberculosis continued  

First-line drugs 
 isoniazid (INH), rifampin (RIF), pyrazinamide (PZA), 
and ethambutol (EMB) are used together in initial treatment 
INH is given orally once/day, has good tissue penetration (including 
CSF), and is highly bactericidal. It remains the single most useful and 
least expensive drug for TB treatment. INH resistant about  10% .INH is 
safe during pregnancy. 
Adverse reactions include: 

1-  General:  rash, fever, and, rarely, anemia and agranulocytosis. 
2-  Liver disease  INH causes asymptomatic, transient 

aminotransferase elevations &  clinical (usually reversible) 
hepatitis occurs more often in patients> 35 yr, alcoholics, 
postpartum women, and patients with chronic liver disease.  

3-  Peripheral neuropathy can result from INH-induced pyridoxine 

(vitamin B

6

) deficiency, most likely in pregnant or breastfeeding 

women, undernourished patients, patients with diabetes mellitus or 
HIV infection, alcoholics, patients with cancer or uremia, and the 
elderly. A daily dose of pyridoxine 25 to 50 mg can prevent this 
complication. 

RIF it is an oral bactericidal, is well-absorbed, penetrates well into 
cells and CSF, and acts rapidly. It also eliminates dormant organisms 
in macrophages or caseous lesions that can cause late relapse. Thus, 
RIF should be used throughout the course of therapy. Adverse effects 
include cholestatic jaundice (rare), fever, thrombocytopenia, renal 
failure & drugs interaction. RIF is safe during pregnancy. 
PZA is an oral bactericidal drug. When used during the intensive 
initial 2 mo of treatment, it shortens the duration of therapy to 6 mo 
and prevents development of resistance to RIF. 
Its major adverse effects are GI upset and hepatitis. It often causes 
hyperuricemia, which is generally mild and only rarely induces gout. 
PZA safety in pregnancy has not been confirmed. 
EMB is given orally and is the best tolerated of the first-line drugs. Its 
main toxicity is optic neuritis, which is more common at higher doses 
and with impaired renal function. Patients with optic neuritis present 
initially with an inability to distinguish blue from green, followed by 
impairment of visual acuity which is reversible if detected early, 


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patients should have a baseline test of visual acuity and color vision 
and should be questioned monthly regarding their vision. Caution is 
warranted if communication is limited by language and cultural 
barriers, in young children who cannot read eye charts or unconscious 
patients ,when these symptoms develop it should be stopped & 
another drug is substituted . EMB can be used safely during 
pregnancy.  
Second-line drugs 
Other antibiotics are active against TB and are used primarily when 
patients have drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) or do not tolerate one of the 
first-line drugs. 
Group 1 aminoglycosides & related drugs: for parenteral use only  
Streptomycin is very effective and bactericidal. Resistance is still 
relatively uncommon.dose-related adverse effects include renal 
tubular damage, vestibular damage, and ototoxicity. In patients with 
renal insufficiency, dosing frequency should be reduced 
Streptomycin is contraindicated during pregnancy because it may 
cause vestibular toxicity and ototoxicity in the fetus. 
Kanamycin and amikacin  Their renal and neural toxicities are 
similar to those of streptomycin. Kanamycin is the most widely used 
injectable for MDR-TB. 
Capreomycin, a related non-aminoglycoside parenteral bactericidal 
drug, has dosage, effectiveness, and adverse effects similar to those of 
aminoglycosides. 
Group 2 fluoroquinolones as levofloxacin & moxifloxacin are the 
most active and safest TB drugs after INH and RIF. 
Group 3 rifamycins derivatives as: 

• 

Rifabutin is used for patients taking drugs (particularly 
antiretroviral drugs) that have unacceptable interactions with RIF. 
Its action is similar to RIF, rifabutin has been associated with 
uveitis. 

• 

Rifapentine is used in one dose/wk regimens but is not used in 

children or patients with HIV (because of unacceptable treatment 
failure rates) or extrapulmonary TB.  
Group 4 Other 2nd-line drugs include ethionamide, cycloserine, and 
para-aminosalicylic acid (PAS). These drugs are less effective and 


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more toxic than the first-line drugs but are essential in treatment of 
MDR-TB. 
Group 5 new drugs Bedaquiline, delamanid, and sutezolid are new 
anti-TB drugs that are typically reserved for highly resistant TB 
(precise indications are not yet fully defined) or for patients who 
cannot tolerate other 2nd-line drugs. 
Treatment of LTBI 
Treatment is indicated principally for 

• 

documented TST conversion within the previous 2 yr. 

• 

CXR changes consistent with old TB but no evidence of active TB 

• 

People who, if infected, are at high risk of developing active TB 
(eg, HIV-infected & drug-induced immunosuppression) 

• 

Any child < 5 yr who is a close contact of a person with smear-
positive TB, regardless of whether there was TST conversion 

Treatment generally consists of: 

1-  INH unless resistance is suspected , 300 mg /day 

(10mg/kg)for 9 mo  

2-  RIF 600 mg /day for 6 mo.:if INH resistance or intolerance. 
3-   combination of INH & RIF for 3 months if no time 

available but higher side effects.  

Prevention:General preventive measures as staying at home, avoiding 
visitors, covering coughs with a tissue or hand are followed. 
Vaccination 
The BCG vaccine is made from an attenuated strain of M. bovis . BCG 
clearly reduces the rate of extrathoracic TB in children, especially TB 
meningitis, and may prevent TB infection.  
Although BCG vaccination often converts the TST, the reaction is 
usually smaller than the response to natural TB infection, and it 
usually wanes more quickly. IGRAs are not influenced by BCG 
vaccination and should ideally be used in patients who have received 
BCG to be sure that the TST response is due to infection with M. 
tuberculosis

Special Populations 
Children 
Children infected with tuberculosis are more likely than adults to 
develop active disease, extrapulmonary disease mostly Lymphadenitis 
and meninges.  


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The elderly 
Reactivated disease can involve any organ, but particularly the lungs, 
reactivation may cause few symptoms and can be overlooked for 
weeks or months, delaying appropriate evaluation 
INH causes hepatotoxicity in up to 4 to 5% of patients > 65 yr 
compared with < 1% of patients < 65 yr.  
HIV-infected patients 
TST sensitivity is generally poor here due to anergy. 
Dissemination of bacilli during primary infection is usually much 
more extensive in patients with HIV infection. Consequently, a larger 
proportion of TB is extra-pulmonary & the NTM infection is common 
especially if CD4 <50. Tuberculomas (mass lesions in the lungs or 
CNS due to TB) are more common and more destructive. HIV 
infection reduces both inflammatory reaction and cavitation of 
pulmonary lesions. As a result, a chest x-ray may show a nonspecific 
pneumonia or even be normal. Smear-negative TB is more common 
when HIV co-infection is present.  
Treatment of TB should started 2 weeks before starting HAART & the 
courses as classical TB unless DR TB is there . 
TB in pregnancy 
No harmful effect of TB on pregnancy & vise verse  
Treatment should avoid PYZ * STP & include RIF,INH&E MB for 9 
months . 
TB & hepatitis 
In hepatic patient caution is needed as TB &anti-TB can injure the 
liver.  
Anti-TB induced hepatitis : manifested as malaise ,N&V with clinical 
jaundice + 3 folds elevation of liver enzymes or asymptomatic 5 folds 
elevation of enzymes, the management: 

4-  Stop all drugs if the patients toxic give streptomycin + one 

from the 2

nd

 line , if not toxic keep him without treatment 

5-  Do investigations to exclude accidental cause 
6-  After full recovery start gradual half dose re-introduction of 

RIF then EMB then INH  

7-  Not to re-introduce PYZ as it can be fatal  

 
 


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TB lymphadenitis 
Tuberculous lymphadenitis typically involves the lymph nodes in the 
posterior cervical and supraclavicular chains or Mediastinal lymph 
nodes as a part of primary pulmonary diseases 
tuberculous lymphadenitis is characterized by progressive swelling of 
the affected nodes to become inflamed matted together and tender 
with +ve fluctuation & the overlying skin may break down, resulting 
in a draining fistula. treatment with classical anti-TB plus surgical 
excision the treatment should continue for 6 months regardless the 
nodes increased or disappeared  
Miliary TB 
miliary TB occurs when a tuberculous lesion erodes into a blood 
vessel, disseminating millions of tubercle bacilli into the bloodstream 
and throughout the body. The lungs and bone marrow are most often 
affected, but any site may be involved. Miliary TB is most common 
among children < 4 yr, immunocompromised people, and the elderly. 
Symptoms include fever, chills, weakness, malaise, and often 
progressive dyspnea. Intermittent dissemination of tubercle bacilli 
may lead to a prolonged FUO. Bone marrow involvement may cause 
anemia, thrombocytopenia, or a leukemoid reaction. 
The work up as pulmonary TB but If all tests are negative and miliary 
TB is still a concern, biopsies of the bone marrow and the liver are 
done. If TB is highly suspected ,treatment should usually proceed 
despite inability to demonstrate TB organisms. 
CXR in miliary TB shows thousands of 2-3mm interstitial nodules 
evenly distributed through both lungs. Treatment as standard TB 

 

pneumonia in immune-compromised patients 

caused by unusual pathogens or by the same pathogens as those that 
cause community-acquired pneumonia 
clinical presentations 
Symptoms and signs are same but here the  Symptoms may be mild or 
absent as no fever especially in neutropenic patients . In some patients 
they show non-responding pneumonia or asymptomatic changes in 
CXR . 
Diagnosis 

• 

Chest x-ray: may be normal 


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• 

Assessment of oxygenation 

• 

Induction or bronchoscopy to obtain sputum 

• 

Blood cultures 

Treatment  
1-  Broad-spectrum antimicrobial therapy

 

 that are effective against 

gram-negative bacilli, Staphylococcus aureus, and anaerobes are 
needed, If patients with conditions other than HIV infection do not 
improve with 5 days of antibiotic therapy, antifungal therapy is 
frequently added empirically. 

2-  therapies to enhance immune system function: as reduced or stop 

the drugs or give CSF for neutropenic patients or IG to IG 
deficient patients. 

Prevention: as vaccination, post-exposure Ig or chemoprophylaxis  

P. jirovecii pneumonia 

is a ubiquitous organism transmitted by aerosol route and causes no 
disease in immunocompetent patients, risk factor for P.j pneumonia: 

• 

Patients with HIV infection and CD4+ counts < 200/μL 

• 

Organ transplant recipients 

• 

Patients with hematologic cancers 

• 

Patients taking corticosteroids 

Most patients have fever& dry cough evolves over several days to weeks( 
in HIV infection less flared features) with dyspnea mostly on exercise. 
Diagnosis 
Chest x-ray
 characteristically shows diffuse, bilateral perihilar infiltrates, 
but can be normal x-rays. 
Histopathologic demonstration of the organism is needed for 
confirmation of the diagnosis. Methenamine silver, Giemsa, Wright-
Giemsa, modified Grocott, Weigert-Gram, or monoclonal antibody stain 
is used. Sputum specimens are usually obtained by induced sputum or 
bronchoscopy. 
Treatment 

• 

Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole 

• 

Corticosteroids if Pao

2

< 70 mm Hg 

Treatment is with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) 4 to 5 
mg/kg IV or po tid for 14 to 21 days. Treatment can be started before 
diagnosis is confirmed because P. jirovecii cysts persist in the lungs for 
weeks. Alternative regimens, which are also given for 21 days, are 


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• 

Pentamidine ,Atovaquone ,Trimethoprim 
with dapsone  ,Clindamycin with primaquine  

Adjunctive therapy with corticosteroids is recommended for patients with 
a Pao

2

< 70 mm Hg.  

Prevention 
HIV-infected patients who have had P. jirovecii pneumonia or who have 
a CD4+ count < 200/μL should receive prophylaxis with TMP/SMX 
80/400 mg once/day 

Aspergillosis 

 is an opportunistic infection caused by inhaling spores of the 
mold Aspergillus, commonly present in the environment; the spores 
invade blood vessels, causing hemorrhagic necrosis and infarction. 
Symptoms may be those of : 

•  asthma related : either exacerbate asthma as any irritant or 

colonization of the airway with antigenic stimulation causing 
refractory asthma called allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis 

•  invasive pneumonia seen as acute fulminant disease in 

immunodeficient patients ,toxic with imaging show air cresent sign 
(air around a consolidation ) need immediate antifungal treatment 
systemically 

•  mycetoma colonization of the fungi in  any cavities as old TB or 

CF lead to a ball like lesion on imaging show ball in cavity that 
change in position can cause hemoptysis no need to antifungal 
treatment may need surgical treatment   

Diagnosis is primarily clinical but may be aided by imaging, 
histopathology, and specimen staining and culture ,Galactomannan 
antigen test on serum and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid can be useful. 

Antifungal drugs  voriconazole, amphotericin B (or its lipid 
formulations), caspofungin, or itraconazole.  

 




رفعت المحاضرة من قبل: Hatem Saleh
المشاهدات: لقد قام عضو واحد فقط و 80 زائراً بقراءة هذه المحاضرة








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