Subject: Child Health Nursing
Tuberculosis, often known as tuberculosis, is an infectious bacterial illness caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis that mostly affects the lungs. It spreads from person to person via droplets from patients with active respiratory disease's throat and lungs. It can also affect the intestines, meninges, bones and joints, glands, and other body tissues. Only people with active tuberculosis infections can spread the bacteria. Coughing, sneezing, and even talking can release bacteria into the surrounding air, infecting those who breathe it. If you are from or visit to specific countries where tuberculosis is common, your chances of becoming infected are higher. Head or neck cancer, diabetes, immune-suppressing illnesses such as HIV or AIDS, long-term steroid use, and other factors may all play a role in promoting active disease in someone with an inactive TB infection. In most cases, illness is spread through inhalation and ingestion of infected discharge droplets.Bovine tuberculosis is spread through the consumption of contaminated milk. Coughing for three weeks or more, coughing up blood, chest pain or pain with breathing or coughing, unintentional weight loss, and night sweats are all signs and symptoms of active tuberculosis. Tuberculosis can also damage other organs such as the kidneys, spine, and brain.
TB, or tuberculosis, is an infection brought on by bacteria. Tuberculosis usually affects the lungs, but it can spread to the joints, bladed, spine, brain and other parts of the body.
There are two types of tuberculosis:
Common medicines used to treat tuberculosis are:
According to the doctor's orders, the patient must take one or more of these medications. These medications usually have no side effects, but they can harm the liver, so avoid drinking or taking acetaminophen while taking TB medications.
In areas where tuberculosis is more prevalent, newborns are frequently immunized with the bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine, which can prevent severe tuberculosis in children. Because it is ineffective in adults, the BCG vaccine is not recommended for broad use in the United States. Several novel tuberculosis vaccines are in various phases of development and testing.
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TBFACTS.org. 2017. <http://www.tbfacts.org/tb/>.
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Wong, D.l., & Hockenberry, M.J. (1999). Nursing care of infants and children (7th ed.). London: Mosby.
What are the causes and risk factors of tuberculosis ?
Causes:
Predisposing factors:
Define tuberculosis .
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which causes tuberculosis, is an infectious bacterial disease that most frequently affects the lungs. Droplets from the throat and lungs of patients with the active respiratory disease are used to transmit it from one person to another.
Explain the pathophysiology of tuberculosis ?
Less than 10% of people with M. tuberculosis have latent TB infections, also known as LTBI, which are asymptomatic and have no likelihood of developing into overt, active tuberculous disease. The chance of having active TB in people with HIV rises to over 10% year. The fatality rate for active TB individuals might reach 66% if proper treatment is not provided.
When the mycobacteria enter the pulmonary alveoli, where they infiltrate and multiply inside alveolar macrophage endosomes, the TB infection starts. Macrophages recognize the bacterium as being alien and make an effort to phagocytose it. During this process, the macrophage encloses the bacterium and briefly stores it in a phagosome, a membrane-bound vesicle. A phagolysosome is produced once the phagosome joins forces with a lysosome. The cell tries to kill the bacterium in the phagolysosome by using acid and reactive oxygen species. But M. tuberculosis is shielded from these poisons by a thick, waxy mycolic acid capsule. In the macrophage, M. tuberculosis can reproduce and eventually destroy the immune cell.
The "Ghon focus," the main lung infection location, is typically found in the upper half of the lower lobe or the lower part of the upper lobe. Lung tuberculosis can also develop as a result of bloodstream infection. The top of the lung is often where one may locate a Simon focus. [56] This hematogenous transmission can also spread an infection to further-reaching areas, including the kidneys, bones, brain, and peripheral lymph nodes. The disease can affect any part of the body, but for unknown reasons, it rarely affects the thyroid, pancreas, skeletal muscles, or heart.
One of the granulomatous inflammatory disorders is tuberculosis. Granulomas are formed by the aggregation of macrophages, T lymphocytes, B lymphocytes, and fibroblasts. Lymphocytes surround the infected macrophages. In the alveolar lumen, a massive multinucleated cell is created when other macrophages attack the infected macrophage. The granuloma may stop mycobacteria from spreading and offer a local habitat for immune system cell engagement. The bacteria may employ the granulomas, according to more recent research, to protect themselves from the host's immune system. The immune response is inhibited because macrophages and dendritic cells in the granulomas cannot present antigen to lymphocytes. Latent infection can develop from bacteria that become dormant inside the granuloma. The development of aberrant cell death (necrosis) in the center of tubercles is another characteristic of the granulomas. Caseous necrosis is the medical word for this condition, which has a texture similar to soft, white cheese.
The TB bacteria can travel throughout the body and create several foci of infection if they are able to enter the bloodstream through a site of damaged tissue. These foci of infection will all show as little, white tubercles in the tissues. Miliary tuberculosis is the name for this severe form of TB disease, which is particularly prevalent in young children and people with HIV. Even with treatment, the mortality rate for those with this disseminated TB is significant (about 30%).
The virus fluctuates in severity among various persons. Healing and fibrosis frequently counteract tissue degeneration and necrosis. Scarring and cavities filled with caseous necrotic debris replace the damaged tissue. Some of these cavities are connected to the bronchi during an active disease, which makes it possible to cough up this substance. It can spread the infection since it has active bacteria. The use of the proper antibiotics during treatment eliminates bacteria and promotes recovery. After treatment, scar tissue eventually replaces the damaged areas.
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