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TB pathogenesis

Find out exactly how TB causes damage to the lungs. These videos do not provide medical advice and are for informational purposes only. The videos are not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read or seen in any Khan Academy video. Created by Stanford School of Medicine.

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  • piceratops tree style avatar for user egrossman19
    At round the TB infected the Macrophages coming to get it. I thought macrophages "ate" and destroyed invading pathogens. Does TB manage to find a way around that, and if so how?
    (4 votes)
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    • leaf green style avatar for user Jerwin Jake
      M. Tuberculosis activates the "alternative complement pathway" – C3b (opsonization) which allows them to be endocytosed into the macrophages . Once inside "Sulfatides" in cell envelope of the bacteria inhibits phagosome – lysosomal fusion allowing intracellular survival.

      Imagine swallowing something you cant digest.
      (6 votes)
  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Anna M
    At , for Diabetes, they've written DM. This means Diabetes Mellitus doesn't it? Then what about Diabetes Insipidus?
    (4 votes)
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    • blobby green style avatar for user dshimonov
      DM is Diabetes Mellitus and DI is Diabetes Insipidus. In a nutshell, diabetes mellitus (sweet urine) means one's blood has a lot of glucose (sugar; hyperglycemia). DI means the urine is pretty much tasteless. DI has nothing to do with DM and the reason DI occurs is b/c the kidneys can't take back water into the body, so a DI patient ends up losing a lot of water (called free water loss).
      For Diabetes Mellitus, there are 2 types -- type I DM and type 2 DM. VERY simplistically, T1DM is the one people get at a young age and they tend to be skinny. T2DM is "acquired" because of possible poor nutrition, obesity and other things. T2DM has a greater genetic component than T1DM, however.
      **All these conditions are pretty bad and need medical attention.
      Hope that helps.
      (5 votes)
  • leaf green style avatar for user 福龍丸
    "...with tiny little spots that are called ? 'cause they're so tiny...". How is this word written?
    (2 votes)
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  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user DA WIZZZZARD
    How did tuberculosis get started?
    (2 votes)
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  • leaf green style avatar for user Mehul Sharma
    Calcification basically means calcium deposits right ? Why specifically calcium ? other salts could be deposited in the granuloma as well right ?
    (2 votes)
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    • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Crystal Teh
      Yes, calcification is the accumulation of calcium salts in body tissue. Pathologically, a granuloma is an organized collection of macrophages. Formation of granulomas often cause calcification in soft tissues after a long period of time, or otherwise, granulomatous inflammation due to deposition of uric acid crystals (in case of gout), or necrosis (death of cell tissues)
      (2 votes)
  • blobby green style avatar for user fsantosps2
    What its not clear to me, is how the bacteria arises, how a person going to infected?
    (1 vote)
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    • male robot hal style avatar for user David
      he human body is the ideal environment for a lot of different types of bacteria. It's warm and there are plenty of dark and moist places for bacteria to multiply (lungs, mouth, intestines)
      Bacterial infections may be transmitted through direct or indirect contact with a reservoir of infectious bacteria.

      Direct contact occurs when an individual comes into contact with the reservoir via touching infected bodily fluid; sharing beverages containing infectious bacteria; being bitten by an insect or other animal that is carrying the bacteria; or inhaling bacterial particles, often emitted by sneezing or coughing.
      (3 votes)
  • marcimus purple style avatar for user Kate Wang
    How is TB created and is there a way to actually cure it?
    (1 vote)
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    • male robot donald style avatar for user noah reeves
      TB is a bacterial infection from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Its engulfed by alveoli macrophages that cannot digest it because of its lipid based cell-wall. Its highly aerobic and infect the lungs of human which are the only known carriers. I personally was infected with TB when I was in Iraq and was placed on a 9 month cycle of isoniazid.
      (2 votes)
  • female robot grace style avatar for user sarah beth kelton
    1) How severely infected would the patient with the X-Ray be?
    2) Is there a specific chemical inside the TB bacteria that senses a weakened immune system and tells the bacteria to reactivate?
    (1 vote)
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  • leafers ultimate style avatar for user 2012396
    In scientific notation how small is a micron?
    (1 vote)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user lontzk
    Why does a Ghon complex indicate latent TB? How do you distinguish via xray if it is latent or active? Is it based on whether the person is experiencing symptoms (night sweats, coughing)?
    (1 vote)
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    • mr pink orange style avatar for user Estefania.Couto
      It indicates latent TB because in the active we are not just going to see in the xray a only white nodule, we are going to see caverns because that is what active TB in the xray. And yes theres is going to be symptoms like coughing with expectoration for mores than 15 days we should suspect of TB, but that also depends of the background of the patient, remember TB is more commonly seeing in not developed countrys.
      (1 vote)

Video transcript

Charles Prober: Hi, I'm Charles Prober. Morgan Theis: I'm Morgan Theis. Charles Prover: Today we're going to talk about the pathophysiology of tuberculosis, that is how tuberculosis makes people sick. In this cartoon, there is an infected individual shown on the left. That person is coughing or sneezing, and all those little small white dots are particles coming out of the person's mouth. The person on the right is a nonsuspecting individual who is susceptible to infection with TB. The person on the left, when they cough, if they have tuberculosis in their system, then some of those bacilli will cough out and enter the person they're coming into close contact with, enter in the droplets. Some portion of those infected droplets, estimated to be about 10%, go all the way down the susceptible individual's airway and land in the lung. They have to be very, very small to get to the most distal portion of the lung called the alveoli. They have to be around 5 or 10 microns in diameter. Once those bacilli have entered the person's lung, the host, the person's immune system, kicks in at the local level. The first part of the immune system to greet these bacilli are macrophages that line the lung airways. These macrophages take up the bacilli and within the macrophages the bacilli may reproduce, that is increase in numbers. The macrophage may then release the bacilli. Other macrophages will pick them up, and eventually one has a number of cells in this distal part of the lung that are infected. When these marcophages then come together and lung destruction occurs in the mixture of this, they end up forming a particular kind of lesion in the lung called a granuloma. A granuloma, which is often used in the context of TB infections, it's also called a tuberculoma, are a group of macrophages and other inflammatory cells that are the reaction to this TB infection. Once that granuloma becomes large enough for one to see, so if a pathologist is looking at the lung, that is called a Gohn focus, G-O-H-N, of course named after somebody Dr. Gohn. After the local infection in the macrophages occurs and the granuloma has been formed, if the infection is not controlled in that local site, there is spillover of the infection to the regional lymph nodes, so the lymph nodes in the lung. Then those regional lymph nodes have an immune reaction. The regional lymph nodes plus the infected granuloma is referred to as a Gohn complex. This may be evident on a chest x-ray that a person has done either for routine basis or for whatever reason. A radiologist seeing this will say, "Oh, this looks like a previous infection with tuberculosis." We'll show later an example both of a granuloma and a Gohn complex on radiographs. All of this infection, the person who's now infected, this is referred to as a primary infection. The individual is infected with tuberculosis. For many individuals, that's the end of the story. The tuberculosis remains in what is referred to as a latent state and remains latent for the person's entire life without causing any problem. Morgan Theis: Do they actually get rid of the bacteria entirely? Charles Prober: It's not clear if the bacteria ever are completely killed or not. There is some evidence that, in fact, some do clear the bacteria, but from a clinical standpoint, one has to assume that once you've been infected with tuberculosis, it's with you forever and may cause subsequent problems, which we'll speak about in a moment. For 90% of people, it's sort of the story ends there. However, that leaves 10%. About half of that 10%, so 5%, their primary infection is progressive, so they go on and they develop a problem shortly after they've been infected with tuberculosis. That problem may be represented as local progression of the infection, so that lung Gohn focus actually becomes larger and larger, and they end up with tuberculosis pneumonia, so pulmonary disease caused by tuberculosis. Or, they may go on even beyond that. The infection may disseminate widely, go to many organs in the body, most especially the liver, other parts of the lung, or even into the brain and other organs. That's about 5% of the patients that go on to have local progression or dissemination. One pattern that's been associated with this dissemination, and it's not the only pattern, is when the infection seeds multiple organs of the body with tiny little spots that are called "millets" because they're so tiny, and this is referred to as miliary tuberculosis. That's most often recognized in the lungs where you see these little tiny spots all over the lungs. That's one form of disseminated infection. That's primary infection and that's 5%. Now, an additional 5-10% of patients emerge from the latent state of the infection and they develop so-called secondary disease. That represents a reactivation of a prior latent infection, or a prior dormant infection. Again, it's estimated that about 5% of the total population who've been infected go on and have this reactivation disease. Morgan Theis: Can that happen at any point during your life? Charles Prober: It can happen at absolutely any point during your life; either within several months of the infection or many, many years later. That reactivation is referred to, as you've written, secondary tuberculosis in contrast to primary infection; this is secondary infection. The likelihood that somebody may reactivate is actually influenced by many factors including the immune state of the host. That is, if the host, the person who's got latent TB, has depressed immunity, especially depressed cell mediated immunity, their likelihood of reactivating can be quite high, relatively speaking. Some of the immune factors that are most recognized as causing an increased chance of reactivation are co-infection with human immunodeficiency virus. That's a big one world-wide, HIV. Another is if the individual has received a transplant or is receiving chemotherapy for some other reason, for example, cancer. Morgan Theis: For the transplant, we're actually giving them immuno-suppresant medicine so they don't reject the transplant, so that puts them at risk. Charles Prober: That knocks down their T-cells and then they have an increased risk. Then patients who abuse drugs intravenously also are at an increased risk, quite a substantial increased risk. These groups together, each of them are a more than 10-fold risk over the general population of reactivation. There are other host factors that also influence reactivation to a lesser extent. They may have a 2- or 3-fold increased chance of reactivation compared to the general population. That would include patients who are malnourished. It would include patients who have diabetes. Even patients whose risk factor is only, and I shouldn't say "only" perhaps, smoking. Those can all increase the chance of tuberculosis emerging from its latent or dormant state and becoming reactivated. Morgan Theis: What's the increase for HIV, transplant, IV drug use? Charles Prober: Probably about 10-fold, or at least 10-fold. Some of them are actually estimated to be up to 70-fold, but certainly greater than 10-fold. The final thing I'd like to say about secondary tuberculosis is that much of it results from reactivated disease, but you can also have secondary tuberculosis because you get reinfected. That means that it's not your own latent TB that's reactivated and caused secondary disease, but you've been exposed to yet another person infected with tuberculosis and your secondary disease results from that reinfection, that new exposure. Morgan Theis: Then once you get that new exposure or the reactivation of your own latent TB, then you can progress sort of down the same pathway of symptoms, is that right? Charles Prober: Exactly. You can have local progression, as you've indicated, or if you're severely depressed immunologically, you may get more of the disseminated infection, including the miliary pattern and so forth. Just to end, I'd like to show the two promised pictures. The picture that is all pink is a zoomed in microscopic view of a granuloma. There are a couple of features to point out. First of all, in the very middle of this granuloma, is very pink, very homogeneous material that probably represents dead macrophages and other debris that have eventually been reabsorbed and form this dense core. Sometimes that becomes calcified over time and that may show up on an x-ray, such as the x-ray picture we show here, as a calcified spot, a white spot, in the lung. We'll come back to that. The other part of the granuloma to point out is this inflammatory reaction occurring around that dense middle. All of the cells that are shown in the blue are lymphocytes and monocytes and macrophages, and this is the reaction to the infection with the tubercular bacilli. Sometimes this actually becomes quite necrotic in the center. It's not shown so much here. Then it's referred to as caseation because it becomes sort of cottage cheese-like. The other picture, the picture of the x-ray, shows the calcific granuloma. That would be, again, the original granuloma, the Gohn focus, and it also shows some swelling of the lymph nodes at the edge of the heart. As previously mentioned, this lymph node reaction along with that Gohn focus, together make up the Gohn complex. That is evidence, radiographic evidence, that this individual has been previously infected with tuberculosis, latently infected, at risk for subsequent reactivation.