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The pathogenesis of Tuberculosis

The pathogenesis of Tuberculosis. What is TB?. Etiology. Tuberculosis is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

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The pathogenesis of Tuberculosis

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  1. The pathogenesis of Tuberculosis

  2. What is TB?

  3. Etiology Tuberculosis is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. TB is spread from person to person through the air. When a person with infectious TB disease (TB that can be spread) coughs or sneezes, tiny particles containing M. tuberculosis may be expelled into the air. These particles, called airborne droplet nuclei. These droplets can remain airborne for minutes to hours after expectoration.

  4. Pathophysiology

  5. Once inhaled, the infectious droplets settle throughout the airways. The majority of the bacilli are trapped in the upper parts of the airways where the mucus-secreting goblet cells exist. The mucus produced catches foreign substances, and the cilia on the surface of the cells constantly beat the mucus and its entrapped particles upward for removal. This system provides the body with an initial physical defense that prevents infection in most persons exposed to tuberculosis.

  6. if Bacteria in droplets bypass the mucociliary system and reach the alveoli  will be quickly surrounded and engulfed by alveolar macrophages. After being ingested by macrophages the mycobacteria continue to multiply macrophages produce proteolytic enzymes and cytokines by in an attempt to degrade the bacteria  Released cytokines attract T lymphocytes to the site, the cells that constitute cell-mediated immunity  granulomaformation macrophages present mycobacterial antigens on their surface to the T cellsinitialimmune process continues for 2 to 12 weeks  microorganisms continue to grow until they reach sufficient numbers to fully elicit the cell-mediated immune response, leading to delayed hypersensitivity, which can be detected by the tuberculin (Mantoux) test weight loss : due to  lack of appetite and the altered metabolism associated with the inflammatory and immune responses  Hemoptysis : can be due to destruction of a vessel located in the wall of the cavity, the rupture of a dilated vessel in a cavity, or the formation of an aspergillomain an old cavity. ( aspergilloma, also known as a mycetoma or fungus ball, is a clump of fungus which exists in a body cavity )

  7. granuloma

  8. Granuloma : • A central caseation necrosis • An inner cellular zone of epithelioid macrophages and Langhans giant cells admixed with lymphocytes • An outer cellular zone of lymphocytes, • A rim of fibrosis (in healing lesions) Granuloma : In granulomas, immune system cells collect in order to destroy the invading pathogen. Sometimes the granulomas can become abscesses that lead to lung cavitation.  a lesion seen in the lung that is caused by tuberculosis. The lesions consist of a calcified focus of infection and an associated lymph node

  9. Patients with LTBI cannot spread TB. • Undergo fibrosis and calcification, successfully controlling the infection  . Microorganisms persist in the necrotic material for years if the immune system later becomes compromised, • disease can be reactivated. * If immunosuppressed  Primary Progressive Miliary TB

  10. Types of TB:

  11. Sites of TB: • Intra pulmonary TB Extra pulmonary TB pulmonary system is the most common location . Within alveolar macrophages in subpleural regions of the lung (may serve as a reactivation site; ALSO may coexist with pulmonary reactivation.) Some e.g CNS, tubercular meningitis • Lymphatic TB • Bloodstream  disseminated or miliaryTB multiorganinvolvement

  12. Thanks a lot “)

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