- •"SEMIOTICS OF TUBERCULOSIS OF THE RESPIRATORY ORGANS.THE CLASSIFICATION OF TUBERCULOSIS
- •SEMIOTION
- •TUBERCULES
- •Approaches for Mycobacterium
- •Currently, the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, tenth revisionrevision
- •Pulmonary tuberculosis
- •Tuberculosis of the respiratory organsA15.4; A16.3 Tuberculosis of the VHLU (secondary)
- •A15.5; A16.4 Tuberculosis of the larynx, trachea and bronchi
- •A15-7; A16.7 Primary tuberculosis of the respiratory organs
- •A15.8: A16.8 Tuberculosis of other respiratory organs
- •Tuberculosis in young children. Anatomo-physiological features in young children:
- •6. Relative sheathing of glands, low bronchial amount of secretion.
- •11. Lymph nodes have little lymphoid tissue, weak valve apparatus, and possible lymphatic
- •in young childrenis .
- •FEATURES OF PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS INCHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS
- •Tuberculosis in adolescents. Anatomic and physiological features of
- •A peculiarity of tuberculosis in adolescence is the tendency to a progressive course,
- •THE LIKELIHOOD OF ILLNESSINCREASES IN THE FOLLOWING SITUATIONS:
- •THREE MAIN GROUPS OF FACTORS THAT
- •NEWLY DIAGNOSED PATIENTS PRECAUTIONS
- •All persons with symptoms of respiratory disease are given a mandatory diagnostic minimum:
- •All persons with symptoms of respiratory disease are given a mandatory diagnostic minimum:
- •THIS IS IMPORTANT.
- •Factors contributing to tuberculosis
- •1. PRINCIPLES OF CLINICAL EXAMINATION
- •1. PRINCIPLES OF CLINICAL EXAMINATION
- •1. PRINCIPLES OF CLINICAL EXAMINATION
- •1. PRINCIPLES OF CLINICAL EXAMINATION
- •1. PRINCIPLES OF CLINICAL EXAMINATION
- •1. PRINCIPLES OF CLINICAL OBSERVATION AUSCULTATION:
- •Suspicion of tuberculosis in Child should be suspected of tuberculosis in the following
- •Suspicion of tuberculosis in Child should be suspected of tuberculosis in the following
- •Suspicion of tuberculosis in Child should be suspected of tuberculosis in the following
- •Suspicion of tuberculosis in Child should be suspected of tuberculosis in the following
- •THANK YOU FOR ATTENTION
1. PRINCIPLES OF CLINICAL OBSERVATION AUSCULTATION:
1. weakened breathing (pleurisy, pleural fusion, pneumothorax).
2. Rigid or bronchial breathing (infiltration of lung tissue).
3. Amphoric breathing (over A giant cavernous cavity with a wide draining bronchus).
4. wheezing in the lungs.
5. Pleural friction murmur
Suspicion of tuberculosis in Child should be suspected of tuberculosis in the following cases (F. Miller, 1984):
1. Cessation of weight gain, gradual weight loss, apathy for 2 to 3 months; Sometimes intermittent fever.
2. Sudden increase in body temperature (the becoming fever may continue for up to 3 weeks), sometimes combined with nodular erythema or tuberculosis-allergic (fluktenulosis) conjunctivitis.
3. Cessation of weight gain of the child in A combination of hoarse, labored breathing and, occasionally, a persistent cough, Sometimes a persistent cough.
4. Sudden fever with pleural pain
Suspicion of tuberculosis in Child should be suspected of tuberculosis in the following cases (F.
Miller, 1984):
5. Abdominal bloating and ascites.
6. Dense and painful masses in the abdomen.
7. Limp and painful swelling in the area of the large joints.
8. Difficulty in bending over, stiffness and back painfulness, possible back deformity and shingling pain.
9. Painless enlargement peripheral lymph nodes, surrounded by a smaller
Suspicion of tuberculosis in Child should be suspected of tuberculosis in the following cases (F. Miller, 1984):
10. Any abscess localized in a peripheral lymph node, especially developed gradually.
11. Subcutaneous abscesses or ulcers on the skin with no Having no apparent cause.
12. A sudden and unexplained change of the child's mood, accompanied by rise in body temperature, sometimes nausea and headaches.
13. Weight loss and apathy in older children and adolescents in conjunction with productive cough.
Suspicion of tuberculosis in Child should be suspected of tuberculosis in the following cases (F. Miller, 1984):
14. Prolonged convalescence After a history of measles, whooping cough, streptococcal tonsillitis, or other intercurrent infection.
15. Signs of a volumetric intracranial process or diffuse encephalitis in children.
16. Painless hematuria or sterile pyuria in a child