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TUBERCULOS
IS IN
CHILDREN
BY
J.TSOFWA
Lecturer MSA MTC,
department of medicine
Presentation outline
 Definition
 burden
 Etiology
 Pathogenesis
 Diagnosis
 Classifications
 Treatment
 Managing the PTB exposed child
Introduction/ burden
 Accounts to 15% of the 9million new cases of
TB worldwide
 75% of these childhood occur in the 22 high
TB burden countries, kenya is one of them.
 Its in the increase because of HIV,poverty,
drug resistance and immigration
definition
 Infection caused by mycobacterium
tuberculosis
 Mycobacterium bovis causes TB in cattle
pathology
 Myco. Bovis infects man after drinking non
sterilised milk from infected cows
 Myco. Tuberculosis is spread by droplet
infection
 In the lungs bacteria engulfed by
macrophages thus antigen reaction limiting
replication and spread of organisms(ghon
focus)-primary lesion
cont
 If the innate defense mechanism of the host fails
to eliminate this infection, the bacilli proliferate
inside alveolar macrophages and kill the cells.
 The infected macrophages produce cytokines and
chemokines that attract other phagocytic cells
including monocytes and other other alveolar
macrophages and neutrophils eventually form a
nodular granulomatous structure called tubercle.
Cont.. pathology
 Replication of the organisms occurs within the
macrophages, which carry some of the
organisms through the lymphatic to the
regional lymph nodes
 If the bacterial replication is not controlled, the
tubercles enlarges and the bacilli enter the
local draining lymph nodes leading to
lymphadenopathy, characteristic
manifestation of primary TB
cont
 The lesion produced by the expansion of the
tubercles into the lung parenchyma and lymph
node involvement is called ghon complex.
 The bacilli continue to proliferate until an effective
cell mediated immune response develops, usually
2-3weeks after initial infection.
 A CMI response terminates the unimpeded growth
of the m tuberculosis 2-3weeks after initial
infection
Cont..pathology
 Cd4 helper T cells activate the macrophages to kill
the intracellular bacteria with resultant epithelium
granuloma formation.
 Cd8 suppressor T cells lyse the macrophages
infected with bacteria, resulting in the formation of
caseating granulomas
 Progression of the primary complex may lead to
the enlargement of hilar and mediastinal lymph
nodes with resultant bronchial collapse
Cont..pathology
 Progressive primary TB may develop when the
primary focus cavitates and organisms spread
through contagious bronchi
 Failure by the host to mount an effective CMI
response and tissue repair leads to progressive
destruction of the lung.
 Bacterial products, tumor necrosis factor alpha,
reactive oxygen intermediates. Reactive nitrogen
intermediates all contribute to the development
cont
 All of these contribute to the development of
caseating necrosis that characterises a
tuberculous lesion
 If the bacterial growth remain unchecked, the
bacteria may spread haematogenously to
produce disseminated TB resembling millet seed.
 Bacilli can also spread mechanically by erosion of
the caseating lesions into the lung airways , it is at
this point that the host becomes infectious to
others
Cont..pathology
 Ghon focus is a mass of granulomas around a
caseation
 Ghon complex: primary lesion+regional
lymphnodes involvement
 If bacteria spreads before establishment of
immunity, a secondary foci is formed in other
organs. Eg bones, , kidney etc , but resolves after
immune response is established and bacteria may
remain latent for many years.
cont
 All above are subclinical in a health person
with a positive tuberculin test.
diagnosis
 Careful and thorough history
 Physical examination
 Relevant investigations eg sputum smear
microscopy, chest radiology, TST.
Clinical manifestation
 Latent(asymptomatic) infection
 Majority no symptoms at any time
 Occasionally: marked by several days of low
grade fever and mild cough
 Rarely: child experiences a clinically
significant disease with high fever, cough,
malaise and flu-like symptoms that resolve
within one week.
cont
 Positive tuberculin test
 symptomatic: non productive cough and mild
dyspnoea, wheezing esp. at night are most
common symptoms
 Systemic complaints such as fever, night sweats,
anorexia and decreased activity occur less often
 Some have failure to thrive that does not improve
significantly until after several months of
treatment.
History/symptoms
 Hx of contact, infancy, no BCG, recent
measles, cough for more than 2weeks, FTT or
weight loss, persistent unexplained fever,
malnutrition, night sweats, long duration
illness
 Signs: serous pleurisy, cold abscess, mottled
nodes, gibbus deformity, on CXR diffuse or
hilar shadows.
Suggestive CXR
 Tracheobronchial adenitis with/without
parenchymal involvement
 Persistent segmental lesion with mediastinal
adenopathy...central compartment of thoracic
cavity, containing heart, lungs, trachea,
esophagus, great vessels)
 Milliary mottling... Innumerable, small 1-4mm
pulmonary nodules scattered throughout the lungs
Suggestive physical findings
 Serous pleurisy
 Papulonecrotic skin lesions
 Cold abscess
 Large matted lymph nodes
 History of measles infection in previous 1-3months
followed by cough more than 2weeks with wt loss
 Gibbus deformity...due to collapse of vertebral
bodies( upper lumbar and lower thoracic
vertebrae)
cont
 Phlyctenular keratoconjuctivitis: nodular inflammation
of cornea or conjuctiva that results from a
hypersensitivity reaction to foreign body.
 Erythema nodosum: tender bumps under skin, painful.
Non specific x ray findings
 Diffuse/bizzare pulmonary shadows( untypical,
unusual)
 Hilar shadows
 Bone defects
Nonspecific signs and symptoms
 Persistent cough
 Measles or whooping cough infection (recent
past)
 Weight loss/FTT
 PEM
 Prolonged unresolving pneumonia
 Recurrent respiratory infection
 Prolonged unexplained fever
cont
 Increased ESR
 Meningeal syndrome
 hepatosplenomegally
investigations
 CXR
 Hemogram, ESR
 TST
 Biopsy
 Gastric aspirate, sputum, CXR, pleural fluid,
AFBs, culture, (PCR, DNA)
 Blood culture
 HIV serology/markers
Key elements to successful
diagnosis of PTB in children
1:Careful history taking( including TB contact
and symptoms consistent with TB)
2:Clinical examination(especially growth
monitoring)
3:Bacteriological diagnosis
 Microscopy for acid fast bacilli
 TB culture and drug suceptibility testing where
possible
cont
 Histopathology depending on specimen: tissue pathology
 Xpert MTB/RIF; detects DNA sequence specific to TB and
rifampicin
 Line probe assays (LIPA)
4: chest radiology:
 Persistent lung opacification
 Diffuse micronodular infiltrates(milliary pattern)
 Pleural effusions with apical infiltrates and cavities
especially in adolescents
 The findings of marked abnormality on CXR in a child with
no signs of respiratory distress(no fast breathing or chest
indrawing) highly supportive of TB
cont
5: HIV testing
6: TST : a positive TST is evidence that one is
infected with MTB, but does not necessarily
indicate disease
Score charts/diagnostic criteria
 Presence of 2 or more of the following
symptoms
 Cough more than 2weeks
 Weight loss or poor weight gain
 Persistent fever and /or night sweats more
than 2weeks
 Fatigue, reduced playfullness, less active
 Plus:
cont.
 Presence of 2 or more of the following
 Positive contact history
 Respiratory signs
 CXR suggestive of PTB (where available)
 Positive mantoux test( where available)
Then PTB is likely, and treatment is justified
RECOMMENDED TREATMENT
REGIMEN
 Changes
1: use of four drugs during intensive phase for
all children living in HIV endemic areas such as
kenya, adding ethambutol as a forth drug for all
children of all ages.
2: treatment of TB meningitis and TB bone to be
extended to a total of 12months (2months
intensive phase, 10months continuation phase)
cont
3: in TB meningitis, ethambutol to replace
streptomycin during intensive phase (RHZE)
due to poor penetration of streptomycin across
the blood brain barrier as well as toxicity.
New WHO recommended
treatment regimen
NEW cases
 Intensive phase(2months)
 RHZ:
 ETHAMBUTOL
• 4months of continuation phase
 RH
Cont.: treatment
Retreatment cases
Intensive phase: 3months (RHZE)
Continuation phase: 5months (RHE)
R: rifampcin
H: Isoniazid
E: ethambutol
Z: pyrazinamide
Note: ethambutol is safe and can be used in children
in doses not exceediing 20mg/kg/day
cont.
 NB: all children must be on pyridoxine 1-
2mg/kg/day
Additional management decisions
 Hospitalization: severe forms of PTB,
EPTB(e,g spinal TB)
 TB meningitis
 Severe malnutrition for nutritional
rehabilitation
cont.
 Signs of severe pneumonia (ie chest
indrawing)
 Other co-morbidities e,g severe anaemia
 Social or logistic reasons to ensure
adherence
 Severe adverse reactions such as
hepatoxicity
Steroid therapy
 Indications
 TB meningitis
 PTB with respiratory distress
 PTB with airway obstruction by hilar
lymphadenopathy
 Severe milliary TB
 Pericardial effusion
Side effects of anti. Tuberculosis
drugs
 Isoniazid:
 Peripheral neuritis( principal side effects)
 This results from competitive inhibition of
pyridoxine metabolism
 dose; 10mg/kg
o Rifampicin
 Its relatively non toxic, the principal side
effects is hepatitis, occurs with a frequency of
1%
Cont..
 GI disturbances, rashes, reversible
leukopenia, thrombocytopenia and blood urea
and nitrogen
 Rifampicin potentiates the action of
anticoagulants such as dicumarol
 Changes color of body fluids like feces, urine,
sputum, saliva, tears and sweat to orange-red
color
cont
 Rifampicin should be included in the
treatment of all serious tuberculosis infections
 Dosage: 10-20mg/kg/day
pyrazinamide
 It should be used in treating myco. With
multiple drug resistance, as well as in
meningeal and milliary infections
 In doses of 20-40mg/kg/day it is well tolerated
by children.
ethambutol
 Its bacteriostatic at the usual dose of 15mg/kg/day
 Most important toxic effect is a retrobulbur neuritis
that infrequently results in loss of visual acuity,
defects in visual fields and inability to distinguish
between red and green; the visual changes are
completely reversible.
 The inability to monitor the toxic effect of
retrobulbar neuritis by the required visual
examinations limits its use in young children.
streptomycin
 It is given intramuscularly and is rapidly
absorbed into the blood stream
 The principal toxic effect is eighth nerve
damage, mainly of the vestibular branch,
resulting in vertigo and ataxia that is usually
permanent.

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TB in Children: Symptoms, Diagnosis and Treatment

  • 2. Presentation outline  Definition  burden  Etiology  Pathogenesis  Diagnosis  Classifications  Treatment  Managing the PTB exposed child
  • 3. Introduction/ burden  Accounts to 15% of the 9million new cases of TB worldwide  75% of these childhood occur in the 22 high TB burden countries, kenya is one of them.  Its in the increase because of HIV,poverty, drug resistance and immigration
  • 4. definition  Infection caused by mycobacterium tuberculosis  Mycobacterium bovis causes TB in cattle
  • 5. pathology  Myco. Bovis infects man after drinking non sterilised milk from infected cows  Myco. Tuberculosis is spread by droplet infection  In the lungs bacteria engulfed by macrophages thus antigen reaction limiting replication and spread of organisms(ghon focus)-primary lesion
  • 6. cont  If the innate defense mechanism of the host fails to eliminate this infection, the bacilli proliferate inside alveolar macrophages and kill the cells.  The infected macrophages produce cytokines and chemokines that attract other phagocytic cells including monocytes and other other alveolar macrophages and neutrophils eventually form a nodular granulomatous structure called tubercle.
  • 7. Cont.. pathology  Replication of the organisms occurs within the macrophages, which carry some of the organisms through the lymphatic to the regional lymph nodes  If the bacterial replication is not controlled, the tubercles enlarges and the bacilli enter the local draining lymph nodes leading to lymphadenopathy, characteristic manifestation of primary TB
  • 8. cont  The lesion produced by the expansion of the tubercles into the lung parenchyma and lymph node involvement is called ghon complex.  The bacilli continue to proliferate until an effective cell mediated immune response develops, usually 2-3weeks after initial infection.  A CMI response terminates the unimpeded growth of the m tuberculosis 2-3weeks after initial infection
  • 9. Cont..pathology  Cd4 helper T cells activate the macrophages to kill the intracellular bacteria with resultant epithelium granuloma formation.  Cd8 suppressor T cells lyse the macrophages infected with bacteria, resulting in the formation of caseating granulomas  Progression of the primary complex may lead to the enlargement of hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes with resultant bronchial collapse
  • 10. Cont..pathology  Progressive primary TB may develop when the primary focus cavitates and organisms spread through contagious bronchi  Failure by the host to mount an effective CMI response and tissue repair leads to progressive destruction of the lung.  Bacterial products, tumor necrosis factor alpha, reactive oxygen intermediates. Reactive nitrogen intermediates all contribute to the development
  • 11. cont  All of these contribute to the development of caseating necrosis that characterises a tuberculous lesion  If the bacterial growth remain unchecked, the bacteria may spread haematogenously to produce disseminated TB resembling millet seed.  Bacilli can also spread mechanically by erosion of the caseating lesions into the lung airways , it is at this point that the host becomes infectious to others
  • 12. Cont..pathology  Ghon focus is a mass of granulomas around a caseation  Ghon complex: primary lesion+regional lymphnodes involvement  If bacteria spreads before establishment of immunity, a secondary foci is formed in other organs. Eg bones, , kidney etc , but resolves after immune response is established and bacteria may remain latent for many years.
  • 13. cont  All above are subclinical in a health person with a positive tuberculin test.
  • 14. diagnosis  Careful and thorough history  Physical examination  Relevant investigations eg sputum smear microscopy, chest radiology, TST.
  • 15. Clinical manifestation  Latent(asymptomatic) infection  Majority no symptoms at any time  Occasionally: marked by several days of low grade fever and mild cough  Rarely: child experiences a clinically significant disease with high fever, cough, malaise and flu-like symptoms that resolve within one week.
  • 16. cont  Positive tuberculin test  symptomatic: non productive cough and mild dyspnoea, wheezing esp. at night are most common symptoms  Systemic complaints such as fever, night sweats, anorexia and decreased activity occur less often  Some have failure to thrive that does not improve significantly until after several months of treatment.
  • 17. History/symptoms  Hx of contact, infancy, no BCG, recent measles, cough for more than 2weeks, FTT or weight loss, persistent unexplained fever, malnutrition, night sweats, long duration illness  Signs: serous pleurisy, cold abscess, mottled nodes, gibbus deformity, on CXR diffuse or hilar shadows.
  • 18. Suggestive CXR  Tracheobronchial adenitis with/without parenchymal involvement  Persistent segmental lesion with mediastinal adenopathy...central compartment of thoracic cavity, containing heart, lungs, trachea, esophagus, great vessels)  Milliary mottling... Innumerable, small 1-4mm pulmonary nodules scattered throughout the lungs
  • 19. Suggestive physical findings  Serous pleurisy  Papulonecrotic skin lesions  Cold abscess  Large matted lymph nodes  History of measles infection in previous 1-3months followed by cough more than 2weeks with wt loss  Gibbus deformity...due to collapse of vertebral bodies( upper lumbar and lower thoracic vertebrae)
  • 20. cont  Phlyctenular keratoconjuctivitis: nodular inflammation of cornea or conjuctiva that results from a hypersensitivity reaction to foreign body.  Erythema nodosum: tender bumps under skin, painful. Non specific x ray findings  Diffuse/bizzare pulmonary shadows( untypical, unusual)  Hilar shadows  Bone defects
  • 21. Nonspecific signs and symptoms  Persistent cough  Measles or whooping cough infection (recent past)  Weight loss/FTT  PEM  Prolonged unresolving pneumonia  Recurrent respiratory infection  Prolonged unexplained fever
  • 22. cont  Increased ESR  Meningeal syndrome  hepatosplenomegally
  • 23. investigations  CXR  Hemogram, ESR  TST  Biopsy  Gastric aspirate, sputum, CXR, pleural fluid, AFBs, culture, (PCR, DNA)  Blood culture  HIV serology/markers
  • 24. Key elements to successful diagnosis of PTB in children 1:Careful history taking( including TB contact and symptoms consistent with TB) 2:Clinical examination(especially growth monitoring) 3:Bacteriological diagnosis  Microscopy for acid fast bacilli  TB culture and drug suceptibility testing where possible
  • 25. cont  Histopathology depending on specimen: tissue pathology  Xpert MTB/RIF; detects DNA sequence specific to TB and rifampicin  Line probe assays (LIPA) 4: chest radiology:  Persistent lung opacification  Diffuse micronodular infiltrates(milliary pattern)  Pleural effusions with apical infiltrates and cavities especially in adolescents  The findings of marked abnormality on CXR in a child with no signs of respiratory distress(no fast breathing or chest indrawing) highly supportive of TB
  • 26. cont 5: HIV testing 6: TST : a positive TST is evidence that one is infected with MTB, but does not necessarily indicate disease
  • 27. Score charts/diagnostic criteria  Presence of 2 or more of the following symptoms  Cough more than 2weeks  Weight loss or poor weight gain  Persistent fever and /or night sweats more than 2weeks  Fatigue, reduced playfullness, less active  Plus:
  • 28. cont.  Presence of 2 or more of the following  Positive contact history  Respiratory signs  CXR suggestive of PTB (where available)  Positive mantoux test( where available) Then PTB is likely, and treatment is justified
  • 29. RECOMMENDED TREATMENT REGIMEN  Changes 1: use of four drugs during intensive phase for all children living in HIV endemic areas such as kenya, adding ethambutol as a forth drug for all children of all ages. 2: treatment of TB meningitis and TB bone to be extended to a total of 12months (2months intensive phase, 10months continuation phase)
  • 30. cont 3: in TB meningitis, ethambutol to replace streptomycin during intensive phase (RHZE) due to poor penetration of streptomycin across the blood brain barrier as well as toxicity.
  • 31. New WHO recommended treatment regimen NEW cases  Intensive phase(2months)  RHZ:  ETHAMBUTOL • 4months of continuation phase  RH
  • 32. Cont.: treatment Retreatment cases Intensive phase: 3months (RHZE) Continuation phase: 5months (RHE) R: rifampcin H: Isoniazid E: ethambutol Z: pyrazinamide Note: ethambutol is safe and can be used in children in doses not exceediing 20mg/kg/day
  • 33. cont.  NB: all children must be on pyridoxine 1- 2mg/kg/day Additional management decisions  Hospitalization: severe forms of PTB, EPTB(e,g spinal TB)  TB meningitis  Severe malnutrition for nutritional rehabilitation
  • 34. cont.  Signs of severe pneumonia (ie chest indrawing)  Other co-morbidities e,g severe anaemia  Social or logistic reasons to ensure adherence  Severe adverse reactions such as hepatoxicity
  • 35. Steroid therapy  Indications  TB meningitis  PTB with respiratory distress  PTB with airway obstruction by hilar lymphadenopathy  Severe milliary TB  Pericardial effusion
  • 36. Side effects of anti. Tuberculosis drugs  Isoniazid:  Peripheral neuritis( principal side effects)  This results from competitive inhibition of pyridoxine metabolism  dose; 10mg/kg o Rifampicin  Its relatively non toxic, the principal side effects is hepatitis, occurs with a frequency of 1%
  • 37. Cont..  GI disturbances, rashes, reversible leukopenia, thrombocytopenia and blood urea and nitrogen  Rifampicin potentiates the action of anticoagulants such as dicumarol  Changes color of body fluids like feces, urine, sputum, saliva, tears and sweat to orange-red color
  • 38. cont  Rifampicin should be included in the treatment of all serious tuberculosis infections  Dosage: 10-20mg/kg/day
  • 39. pyrazinamide  It should be used in treating myco. With multiple drug resistance, as well as in meningeal and milliary infections  In doses of 20-40mg/kg/day it is well tolerated by children.
  • 40. ethambutol  Its bacteriostatic at the usual dose of 15mg/kg/day  Most important toxic effect is a retrobulbur neuritis that infrequently results in loss of visual acuity, defects in visual fields and inability to distinguish between red and green; the visual changes are completely reversible.  The inability to monitor the toxic effect of retrobulbar neuritis by the required visual examinations limits its use in young children.
  • 41. streptomycin  It is given intramuscularly and is rapidly absorbed into the blood stream  The principal toxic effect is eighth nerve damage, mainly of the vestibular branch, resulting in vertigo and ataxia that is usually permanent.