TUBERCULOSIS

(TB), contagious, wasting disease caused by any of several mycobacteria. The most common form of the disease is tuberculosis of the lungs (pulmonary consumption, or phthisis), but the intestines, bones and joints, the skin, and the genitourinary, lymphatic, and nervous systems may also be affected.

There are three major types of tubercle bacilli that affect humans. The human type (Mycobacterium tuberculosis), first identified in 1882 by Robert Koch, is spread by people themselves. It is the most common one. The bovine type (M. bovis) is spread by infected cattle but is no longer a threat in areas where pasteurization of milk and the health of cattle are strictly supervised. The avian type (M. avis) is carried by infected birds but can occur in humans. The tubercle bacillus can live for a considerable period of time in air or dust. The most common means of acquiring the disease is by inhalation of respiratory droplets.

Course of the Disease

Tuberculosis of the lungs usually results in no or minimal symptoms in its early stages. In most persons the primary infection is contained by the body's immune system, and the lesion, called a tubercle, becomes calcified. In many the infection is permanently arrested. In others the disease may break out again and become active years later, usually when the body's immune defenses are low. Untreated, the infection can progress until large areas of the lung and other organs are destroyed. Symptoms of the disease include cough, sputum, bleeding from the lungs, fever, night sweats, loss of weight, and weakness.

Incidence

The incidence of tuberculosis of the lungs, the "white plague" that formerly affected millions of people, declined from the 1950s until 1984; sanatoriums were closed and routine screening was abandoned in the United States. Then, between 1984 and 1992, the incidence increased by 20%, chiefly because of immigration from countries where it is common and because of AIDS, which leaves people particularly vulnerable to the disease. Renewed efforts at control and advances in treatment have been rewarded with incidence declines each year, amounting to a total decline of 31% from 1992 to 1998.

Worldwide the outlook has been far less encouraging. In 1993 the World Health Organization declared TB a global health emergency; approximately one third of the world's population is infected, and an estimated 3 million die each year. Spread of TB is especially rapid in areas with poor public health services and crowded living conditions. In homeless shelters and prisons, crowded conditions and inadequate treatment often go together. Areas where living conditions are disrupted by wars, famine, and natural disasters also are heavily affected.

Especially alarming has been the spread of drug-resistant strains of TB. By the late 1990s scientific experts and international health officials warned that drug-resistant strains were spreading faster than had been anticipated. Bacteria can survive and become drug resistant in patients whose treatment is not properly monitored and seen to completion. Some believe that unless major new treatment strategies are initiated in source countries, drug-resistant TB will eventually become epidemic even in areas with good control programs, such as Europe and America.

Diagnosis and Treatment

Diagnosis is made by a tuberculin skin test. It can be confirmed by X rays of the chest and sputum examination. Ideally, treatment begins after a skin test signals exposure but before active disease has developed. The treatment of choice for prevention and for active cases is the antimicrobial drug isoniazid (INH), available since 1956. In infected individuals it is usually used in combination with other antituberculosis drugs such as rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol. Tuberculosis drugs have to be taken regularly, typically for 6 to 12 months. Many patients abandon their treatment when they feel better; similarly, preventive treatment is often abandoned because of the inconvenience. Such noncompliance is believed to be the main reason for the upsurge in drug-resistant strains of the TB bacilli, many of which are resistant to more than one drug. Drug-resistant TB is difficult to treat and has a much higher death rate.

The combination drug rifater (rifampin, isoniazid, and pyrazinamide) has simplified drug administration. Directly observed treatment, where health-care workers watch patients take each dose of medicine, has proved effective in eliminating the problem of noncompliance in the United States, but monitoring has been less effective in many other parts of the world.

Prevention of Tuberculosis

Preventive measures include strict standards for ventilation, air filtration, and isolation methods in hospitals, medical and dental offices, nursing homes, and prisons. If someone is believed to have been in contact with another person who has TB, preventive antibiotic treatment may have to be given. Infected persons need to be identified as soon as possible so that they can be isolated from others and treated.

An antituberculosis vaccine, bacille Calmette-Guérin, or BCG vaccine, was developed in France in 1908. Although there is conflicting evidence as to its efficacy (it appears to be effective in 50% of those vaccinated), it is given to over 80% of the world's children, mostly in countries where TB is common; it is not generally given in the United States. Federal health officials in the United States have stated (1999) that a new vaccine is essential to TB prevention. It is hoped that the determination of the complete DNA (genome) sequence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, achieved in 1998, will hasten the development of an effective vaccine.

Bibliography

See R. Dubos, The White Plague (1955); S. A. Waksman, The Conquest of Tuberculosis (1964).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Tuberculosis  - 10652 results

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Page EXHAUSTION as a symptom of tuberculosis 28 EXPECTORATION as a feature of tuberculosis 28 EXPOSURE as a factor in tuberculosis 31 FAMILY GROUPS, statistics of, regarding tuberculosis 24 - 25 , 27 FEVER as a symptom of tuberculosis 28 FINGER...
...not just to control and pre- vent tuberculosis, but to better understand it, particu...they hope to learn more about how M. tuberculosis interacts with human cells, how it...reactivation. A complete understanding of tuberculosis will take time, but many tantalizing...
...equally nonsensical literature on tuberculosis. Friedrich Wilhelm Beneke denied the existence of tuberculosis bacilli. He supposedly found structures...blood that looked and reacted like tuberculosis bacilli. 12 This achievement ranks...
Increasing Tuberculosis and Human Immunodeficiency Virus...Virus Infection on Recurrence of Tuberculosis after Rifampicin-Based Treatment...immunodeficiency Virus Infection on Tuberculosis: Tuberculosis Risks Revisited...
...undoubtedly caused some involuntary low fertility, tuberculosis was the main culprit. Studies of tuberculosis among Indians conducted in 1907-8 and 1921 noted that Indians fell victim to tuberculosis more than whites and blacks. The earlier report...
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Tuberculosis Control in Alberta: a Federal, Provincial...Partnership by Richard Long COMMENTARY Tuberculosis control is a public health issue and...territory has organized and funded its own tuberculosis control program. Decentralization...
Tuberculosis and Indoor Biomass and Kerosene Use...Kirk R. Smith BACKGROUND: In Nepal, tuberculosis (TB) is a major problem. Worldwide...ehp.0901032 Online 17 December 2009 Tuberculosis (TB) is a major infectious disease...
Tuberculosis in the Sierra Santa Marta, Veracruz...diagnosed with ganglionary and pulmonary tuberculosis between January 1, 1998, and December...21 women and 19 men) diagnosed with tuberculosis. The survey was conducted using a...
Tuberculosis Related to Labor Activity in an Area...Calabuig Introduction The incidence of tuberculosis (TB) is increasing in nearly every...demographic characteristics of 374 tuberculosis patients treated at the La Fe University...
Pediatric Tuberculosis in Alberta First Nations (1991...Province of Alberta, age-adjusted tuberculosis rates in Treaty First Nations are...Within First Nations communities, tuberculosis cases in children represent ongoing...
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The Tuberculosis Case: Improving Communication between...Corrections. by Ellen R. Murray Tuberculosis (TB) is an airborne disease that...large number of people. Screening for tuberculosis is not always easy in correctional...
Why dont we stop tuberculosis? by Anne E. Platt Thought to be a disease of the past, tuberculosis has surged back with a vengeance, and...despite the fact that it is curable. Tuberculosis, a disease many people associate with...
...Researchers Shoot for New Treatments against Tuberculosis. by Aimee Cunningham In the "The...bacteria, the microbe that causes tuberculosis employs a similar strategy. Mycobacterium tuberculosis packs extra layers of sugars and lipids...
Tuberculosis; Still Striking after All These Years...wasnt a great deal more we could do for tuberculosis patients." The TB annex no longer...medical problems. But the problem of tuberculosis, dormant for a number of years, is...
The Fight against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria: Past Progress and...with HIV, 8 million contract tuberculosis (TB), and between 300 million...the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. About 70 per cent...
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National Tuberculosis Day. This day is being observed as National Tuberculosis Day to build awareness on how to reduce the incidence of tuberculosis (TB) and TB-related morbidity and mortality in the country. Tuberculosis is an infectious...
World Tuberculosis Day. MANILA, Philippines - March 24 of each year is observed as World Tuberculosis (TB) Day to strengthen public awareness of tuberculosis as a global health threat and the various efforts to eliminate the disease. The event...
Tuberculosis Remains a Concern; Disease Rates Low...for the potentially deadly disease tuberculosis to thrive. The citys high number of...with the Washington Hospital Center. Tuberculosis, a respiratory infection marked by...
World Tuberculosis Day 2006: Encouraging Action for Life. TUBERCULOSIS or TB is an infection caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which most commonly affects the lungs (pulmonary TB) but can also affect the central nervous system...
Philippine Tuberculosis Society, Inc.: 97 Years of Combatting TB in the Philippines. TUBERCULOSIS (TB) is a deadly disease. It is the...loss every year of Filipino life due to tuberculosis, several civic-minded persons in Manila...
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TUBERCULOSIS (TB), contagious, wasting disease...most common form of the disease is tuberculosis of the lungs (pulmonary consumption...humans. The human type ( Mycobacterium tuberculosis ), first identified in 1882 by Robert...
TB , abbreviation for tuberculosis see tuberculosis . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...after Maria and Elizabeth contracted tuberculosis and died. At home for the next five...refusing all medical aid, died of tuberculosis the following December. Anne, whose...Hall appeared in 1848, also died of tuberculosis in May, 1849. Now that the people...
...taking care of his brother, who had tuberculosis, he developed the disease. He went...Seeking to aid others suffering from tuberculosis, he founded (1884) at Saranac Lake...the first laboratory for the study of tuberculosis. The sanatorium closed in 1954 for...
ISONIAZID i soni zid, drug used to treat tuberculosis . Also known as isonicotinic acid hydrazide, isoniazid...organisms (see drug resistance ). To prevent development of tuberculosis in individuals who have a positive reaction to a tuberculin...
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