Pulmonary tuberculosis
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Background
Microbiology
- Caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Clinical Presentation
- Subacute or chronic cough (at least 2 to 3 weeks) eventually becoming productive and occasionally involving hemoptysis
- Should be suspected in any patient with cough and HIV infection
- Constitutional symptoms, with fevers, night sweats, and unexplained weight loss
- Usually from reactivation of latent tuberculosis infection, and usually reactivates in lung apices
- May transiently improve with partially-active antibiotics such as fluoroquinolones
Investigations
- Spontaneous sputum, induced sputum, or bronchoalveolar lavage specimens should be sent for
- Acid-fast staining of a smear
- Culture
- PCR
Management
- Standard HREZ x2mo then HR x4mo
- Isoniazid 5mg/kg/d, max 300mg daily
- Rifampin 10mg/kg/d
- Pyrazinamide 25mg/kg/d, max 2g daily
- Ethambutol 20mg/kg/d, max 1.2g daily
- Pyridoxine 25 mg po daily
- Standard duration for uncomplicated disease is 6 months, but should be extended to 9 months if high-risk (including smear positive at 2 months or cavitations)
- Airborne precautions until:
- Treated for at least 2 weeks
- 3x negative sputum smears, which can be collected hourly, but ideally at 8- to 24-hour intervals, including one early morning collection
- Improvement in symptoms