## Correct Answer: A. Miliary tuberculosis Miliary tuberculosis is characterized by **disseminated hematogenous spread** of *Mycobacterium tuberculosis* resulting in innumerable 1–2 mm granulomas distributed throughout both lungs, resembling millet seeds (hence "miliary"). This occurs when a caseous focus erodes into a blood vessel, releasing bacilli into the circulation. On chest X-ray and histopathology, the hallmark is **uniform distribution of tiny nodules** throughout all lung zones without predilection for upper lobes (unlike primary TB). Histologically, each nodule is a **caseating granuloma** with central necrosis surrounded by epithelioid histiocytes and Langhans giant cells. The clinical presentation is acute and severe—high fever, night sweats, weight loss, and respiratory distress—often mimicking sepsis. In India, miliary TB accounts for 1–3% of TB cases and carries high mortality (20–40%) if untreated. The diagnosis is confirmed by AFB smear positivity, culture, or GeneXpert MTB/RIF. Per RNTCP guidelines, miliary TB is classified as TB with complications and requires standard anti-TB therapy (HRZE) with close monitoring for immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) in HIV co-infected patients. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Emphysema** — Emphysema shows **destruction of alveolar walls** with formation of large air-filled spaces (bullae), not granulomas. On imaging, emphysema presents as hyperlucent areas with loss of vascular markings, predominantly in upper lobes in smoking-related disease. Histologically, there is loss of elastic tissue and absence of inflammation or granulomas. The nodular pattern in miliary TB is fundamentally different—each nodule is a solid granuloma, not an air space. **C. Asbestosis** — Asbestosis causes **pneumoconiosis** with pleural thickening, pleural plaques, and interstitial fibrosis, not granulomas. The nodular pattern in asbestosis is irregular and predominantly affects lower lung zones with pleural involvement. Histology shows asbestos bodies (ferruginous bodies) and fibrosis, not caseating granulomas. Occupational history of asbestos exposure is essential for diagnosis—absent in typical miliary TB presentations in India. **D. Sarcoidosis** — Sarcoidosis presents with **non-caseating granulomas**, whereas miliary TB shows **caseating granulomas with central necrosis**—the critical histological distinction. While both show nodular patterns, sarcoidosis typically affects hilar lymph nodes and mid-lung zones with a more chronic course. Sarcoidosis is rare in India compared to TB, and AFB staining is negative in sarcoidosis. The acute presentation and positive AFB/culture in miliary TB differentiate it clearly. ## High-Yield Facts - **Miliary TB** = hematogenous dissemination of TB with 1–2 mm caseating granulomas uniformly distributed throughout both lungs - **Pathognomonic histology**: caseating granuloma with central caseous necrosis, epithelioid histiocytes, and Langhans giant cells (vs. non-caseating in sarcoidosis) - **Mechanism**: erosion of caseous focus into pulmonary blood vessel → bacillemia → seeding of lungs and other organs - **Clinical presentation**: acute onset fever, night sweats, weight loss, respiratory distress; mortality 20–40% if untreated - **Diagnosis**: AFB smear/culture positive, GeneXpert MTB/RIF positive; chest X-ray shows characteristic 'millet seed' distribution - **RNTCP classification**: TB with complications requiring standard HRZE regimen with close monitoring for IRIS in HIV+ patients ## Mnemonics **MILIARY TB vs. Others (Granuloma Type)** **CASEATING** (TB, Fungal) vs. **NON-CASEATING** (Sarcoid, Crohn's). Miliary TB = caseating + AFB positive + acute presentation. **Miliary TB Trigger: EROSION into VESSEL** Caseous focus → erodes into pulmonary blood vessel → hematogenous spread → uniform nodular pattern in both lungs. Remember: **EROSION = DISSEMINATION**. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair miliary TB with sarcoidosis to trap students who confuse the nodular patterns on imaging. The key discriminator is **caseating vs. non-caseating granulomas** on histology and **AFB positivity** in TB—students who rely only on imaging without considering histology or microbiology will fall into this trap. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, miliary TB is a medical emergency with high mortality if diagnosis is delayed. Always suspect miliary TB in a patient presenting with acute fever, night sweats, and diffuse bilateral nodular infiltrates on CXR—early initiation of anti-TB therapy and monitoring for IRIS (especially in HIV+ patients) can be lifesaving. _Reference: Robbins and Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, Ch. 8 (Infectious Diseases); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 158 (Tuberculosis); RNTCP Guidelines (India)_
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