Abstract
Acute respiratory failure is more common in miliary tuberculosis than in tuberculous bronchopneumonia and also has a worse prognosis. Chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure is frequent after both spinal tuberculosis and surgical treatments for pulmonary tuberculosis. It may develop insidiously or present acutely, for instance, during a chest infection. Hypoventilation appears during REM sleep before non-REM sleep or wakefulness and is readily treatable with non-invasive ventilation. The prognosis is good even if initially tracheostomy ventilation is required temporarily.
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Shneerson, J. M. (2004). Respiratory failure in tuberculosis: A modern perspective. In Clinical Medicine (Vol. 4, pp. 72–76). Royal College of Physicians. https://doi.org/10.7861/clinmedicine.4-1-72
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