Tuberculosis is caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis and is transmitted through inhaling droplets from coughing or sneezing. It affects primarily the lungs but can spread to other parts of the body. Treatment involves antibiotics for many months to prevent resistance, though improving living standards and pasteurization can help prevent transmission.
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Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis is caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis and is transmitted through inhaling droplets from coughing or sneezing. It affects primarily the lungs but can spread to other parts of the body. Treatment involves antibiotics for many months to prevent resistance, though improving living standards and pasteurization can help prevent transmission.
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Tuberculosis
Navoditte Das A2
Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. Robert Koch first identified it in 1882. Viewed under the microscope after Ziehl-Neelsen staining, the cells show up bright red. TB is transmitted by droplet infection (i.e. a person infected with TB coughs, talks or sneezes and droplets of water and mucus are released into the air from the lungs. These droplets contain the TB bacteria. The droplets are inhaled by a second person, who is then infected with the disease.) TB affects the lungs predominantly, but can spread to other parts of the body e.g. lymph (causing scrofula) or the blood (causing sepsis). TB has a thick waxy cell wall, which stops it from breaking down. It can, therefore, survive as dust from dried droplets for weeks. TB can survive inside macrophages (cell wall of the bacterium is very thick and waxy and is resistant to the macrophage enzymes). The bacterium reproduces inside the macrophage for many years without causing infection. Its lipid rich walls act as a food source. When the immune system is weakened (by stress, malnutrition, or another disease HIV is a common cause) the TB bacterium breaks out and re-infects the body. This is a secondary infection, not a true re-infection. TB is characterised by fever, cough, blood in sputum, weight loss (it used to be known as consumption for this reason).Also, the presence of granulomas in a lung x-ray, which is often how TB is first diagnosed. TB targets T cells, disarming a critical response of the immune system. Thus sufferers become vulnerable to opportunistic infections such as pneumonia. They might also die from lack of oxygen or damaged organs. TB is temperature sensitive, and stop reproducing at 42 C. The main treatment is by antibiotics for many months, usually a mixture of antibiotics to prevent the mycobacterium from developing any resistance or immunity. It also kills the hidden bacteria, e.g in cysts. The best way to prevent TB is to improve living standards, i.e less crowding and better working conditions. Since TB can also be transmitted by contaminated milk, pasteurization can prevent this method of spread of the disease. In developed countries, people in close contact with a TB patient can be easily identified, contacted, tested and immunized. The BCG
vaccination is very common and effective in the UK. However
recently there has been a great increase in TB cases, perhaps due to deteriorating social conditions, immigration, and movement of refugees, increasing IV drug use and more people suffering from HIV/AIDS. There has also been the development of multi resistant strains of mycobacterium tuberculosis.