- Tuberculosis (TB) is an infection,
primarily in the lungs (a pneumonia), caused by bacteria called Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. It is spread usually from person to person by breathing
infected air during close contact.
- TB can remain in an inactive
(dormant) state for years without causing symptoms or spreading to other
people.
- When the immune system of a
patient with dormant TB is weakened, the TB can become active (reactivate)
and cause infection in the lungs or other parts of the body.
- The risk factors for acquiring TB
include close-contact situations, alcohol and IV drug
abuse, and certain diseases (for example, diabetes,
cancer, and HIV)
and occupations (for example, health-care workers).
- The most common symptoms and signs
of TB are fatigue,
fever,
weight loss,
coughing,
and night sweats.
- The diagnosis of TB involves skin tests,
chest X-rays,
sputum analysis (smear and culture), and PCR
tests to detect the genetic material of the causative bacteria.
- Inactive tuberculosis may be
treated with an antibiotic, isoniazid (INH), to prevent the TB infection
from becoming active.
- Active TB is treated, usually
successfully, with INH in combination with one or more of several drugs,
including rifampin (Rifadin), ethambutol
(Myambutol), pyrazinamide,
and streptomycin.
- Drug-resistant TB is a serious, as
yet unsolved, public-health problem, especially in Southeast Asia, the
countries of the former Soviet Union, Africa, and in prison populations.
Poor patient compliance, lack of detection of resistant strains, and
unavailable therapy are key reasons for the development of drug-resistant
TB.
- The occurrence of HIV has been
responsible for an increased frequency of tuberculosis. Control of HIV in
the future, however, should substantially decrease the frequency of TB.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
A little talk about Tuberculosis
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