MTB, Mycobacterium tuberculosis

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MTB in brief

  • Chilliness, Fatigue. Weight loss. Lethargy, Anorexia
  • Night Perspiration
  • Low-grade Afternoon, Fever, Night aggravation
  • Abscess, ulcer, lymphadenopathy
  • Mucous membrane inflammation: Respiratory, GI, Genital, Eye
  • Endocrine involvement
  • Genital tuberculosis [1]

Entities

Sign / Symptoms

Disease

Meningitis
  • Headache
Otitis media Ear Pain
Ulceration
  • Mouth, Tongue
  • Esophagus (Odynophagia. Dysphagia)
  • Skin
  • Colon
IBD
Colitis
  • Rectal pain
  • Diarrhea
Lymphadenopathy
  • Mediastinum
  • Axilla
  • Cervical
Abscess
  • Abdominal wall
  • Hepatic; Pancreas, Spleen
  • Psoas muscle
  • Prostate
Pleuritis
  • Pleural effusion
  • Pleurodynia
  • Bilateral
Peritonitis
Cholangitis Vomiting
Pericarditis
Laryngitis Hoarseness
Pneumonia
  • Hemoptysis
  • Rales, Wheezing
  • Productive Cough
  • Dyspnea
Sarcoidosis
Arthritis Arthralgia
Spondylitis
  • Paravertebral
  • Back Pain / Stiffness
Calcium- Vit-D difficulties
  • Dysuria
  • Frequency
  • Painful Swelling of Testis
  • Oligo spermia
Female infertility Hypogonadism
Eruptions. Nodules
Thrombocytopenia
Polycytemia
Adrenal insufficiency
Diabetes mellitus
Thyroid dysfunction

Female infertility

  • Infertility affects 60–80% of women with Female Genital TB
  • It occurs due to distortion or obstruction of the fallopian tubes, intrauterine adhesions causing inadequate endometrial receptivity, or inflammatory destruction of ovarian tissue leading to defective ovarian reserve
  • Primary infertility (66%–85% ) is more common than secondary one,
  • Following infertility, the most frequently reported symptoms in women of reproductive age are
    • Menstrual irregularities
    • Nonspecific symptoms such as lower abdominal or pelvic pain and abnormal vaginal discharge
    • Asherman syndrome (intrauterine adhesions alongside infertility and menstrual irregularities
    • In postmenopausal women, FGTB is characterized by postmenopausal bleeding, leukorrhea, and pyometra [2]

Anal tuberculosis

  • It is an extremely rare extrapulmonary presentation of MTB [3]
  • Less than 1% of the individuals who contract TB manifests as GI TB, and anoperineal TB is much less frequently encountered, 1% of the TB cases of the digestive tract.
  • Anal fistula


Related disease


Remedies

  1. HEP, NIT-AC, PHOS
  2. Lyc, Psor, Sul, Ars, Merc, Ant-t
  3. Tub, Sil, Iod, Canth, Spong, Am-m, Sep, Thuj, Graph
  1. Varma, T, Glob. libr. women's med., (ISSN: 1756-2228) 2008; DOI 10.3843/GLOWM.10034
  2. Christine Tzelios, Werner M Neuhausser, David Ryley, Nhi Vo, Rocio M Hurtado, Ruvandhi R Nathavitharana, Female Genital Tuberculosis, Open Forum Infectious Diseases, Volume 9, Issue 11, November 2022, ofac543,
  3. Azadi A, Jafarpour Fard P, Sagharjoghi Farahani M, Khodadadi B, Almasian M. Anal tuberculosis: A non-Healing anal lesion. IDCases. 2018 Mar 3;12:25-28. doi: 10.1016/j.idcr.2018.02.012. PMID: 29942741; PMCID: PMC6010925.