Guidelines

What are TB granulomas?

What are TB granulomas?

Granulomas represent a pathological hallmark of TB. They are comprised of impressive arrangement of immune cells that serve to contain the invading pathogen. However, granulomas can also undergo changes, developing caseums and cavities that facilitate bacterial spread and disease progression.

How is TB granuloma treated?

The current standard first-line treatment regimen consisting of isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide requires long duration of treatment (at least 6 months for first-line TB therapy and 18–20 months for MDR-TB therapy) to achieve sterilization of infection.

What causes a granuloma to form with TB?

Dendritic cells are important because they present antigens to T cells in the lymph nodes, in which a T-cell response can subsequently be developed. These signalling events lead to the formation of a granuloma, the hallmark of tuberculosis.

What are granulomas?

A granuloma is a small area of inflammation. Granulomas are often found incidentally on an X-ray or other imaging test done for a different reason. Typically, granulomas are noncancerous (benign). Granulomas frequently occur in the lungs, but can occur in other parts of the body and head as well.

Why mycobacterium infection caused granuloma?

There is the evidence that by expressing a set of “persistence” genes, the mycobacterium, together with the host, contributes to granuloma formation as a mechanism to facilitate bacterial dissemination and persistence.

How serious is granuloma?

People with chronic granulomatous disease experience serious bacterial or fungal infection every few years. An infection in the lungs, including pneumonia, is common. People with CGD may develop a serious type of fungal pneumonia after being exposed to dead leaves, mulch or hay.

What infections cause granulomas?

Granulomas are seen in a wide variety of diseases, both infectious and noninfectious. Infections characterized by granulomas include tuberculosis, leprosy, histoplasmosis, cryptococcosis, coccidioidomycosis, blastomycosis, and cat-scratch disease.