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- From: Fulk%Cs.Rochester.Edu@f595.n106.z1.fidonet.org (Fulk@Cs.Rochester.Edu)
- Sender: Usenet@f-454.fidonet.org
- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!sugar!tghost!f-454!Usenet
- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: Re: Tuberculosis
- Message-ID: <725795911.AA00389@f-454.fidonet.org>
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 12:59:07 -0600
- Lines: 98
-
- From cs.rochester.edu!fulk
- To: Doug.Platt@f595.n106.z1.fidonet.org
-
- In article <725297239.AA00335@f-454.fidonet.org> you write:
- >A few weeks ago, a friend told me that his girlfriend (who lives with
- >him) had been diagnosed with "borderline tuberculosis."
- >First, I've never heard of anyone being "borderline" with this disease.
- >Is that possible?
-
- Although I've had some rather unfortunate experiences with TB in friends
- lately, I haven't heard of this diagnosis. Perhaps the diagnosis is
- "inactive TB."
-
- >Second, since he told me this, I've been hesitant to visit them. I'm
- >running out of excuses why I can't come over. Is it as contagious as
- >I think it is. Am I being overly cautious by not visiting there?
-
- If the case is inactive, you probably don't have anything to worry about.
- If her case is active, however, you should be somewhat worried. TB is not
- as contagious as a cold, but it is contagious. To give you an idea: one
- of our students had a mild active case (that he didn't recognize or treat)
- for part of a year; his office mate may have been infected (or may have
- brought the disease from Eastern Europe, we don't know which); no one
- else in the department has caught it.
-
- TB is an interesting disease. It tends to alternate between active and
- inactive modes. In the inactive mode, the bacilli are walled into lung
- cysts (the official name escapes me now), which are the primary findings
- on a chest x-ray. In the active mode, the bacilli spread into the lungs,
- destroying lung tissue and getting coughed up in sputum. Treatment is
- with two antibiotics, usually isoniazid and rifampin; isoniazid (INH)
- kills most of the bacilli, while the rifampin gets any INH-resistant germs.
- Treatment takes a year, because the bacilli are largely inaccessible
- in the cysts. One hopes that the case activates one or more times
- during the year. One hopes that a patient with a temporarily inactive
- case doesn't stop his medication because he feels better.
-
- Notes:
-
- Tine tests (the little pricker they use in school) suffer fairly high
- false negative and positive rates. There is another test (again the name
- escapes me) that is much better; it involves a subcutaneous injection.
-
- Both inactive and active cases test positive.
-
- BCG vaccine, which is often given in the former Soviet Bloc and in some
- parts of the third world, often, but not always, produces a positive test.
-
- X-rays are an important part of tuberculosis diagnosis, but cannot
- _reliably_ distinguish an active from an inactive case. (Source: three
- radiologists I asked this question of, plus the NYS and Monroe County
- health departments. This was very important to someone once.)
-
- The gold standard for activity and transmissibility of TB is a sputum culture.
-
- It is considered reasonable to treat an inactive case with 6 months of INH
- only. I tend to think that this is short-sighted (a non-medical opinion).
-
- INH is very hard on the livers of people over 40 or so. If someone in
- that age range has an inactive case, it will usually be left untreated.
- I understand the tradeoff; I just hope that these people see the doctor
- every time they get a cough.
-
- The TB bacillus can invade other tissues than the lung. However,
- pulmonary TB represents the majority of cases.
-
- TB could be eliminated, a` la smallpox, by a concerted global effort of
- case identification, vaccination, and treatment. The effort would be
- greater than was required for smallpox, and the time to success would
- be longer. But...
-
- TB morbidity is increasing at about 15%/year in the US; most of this
- increase is NOT due to AIDS patients.
-
- The Los Angeles Health Department, in 1990, did not have enough medicine
- for the indigent people with active TB; much less did it have the social
- workers to make sure they kept taking their medicine for a year. As a
- result, there were thousands of poor people in the streets of Los Angeles
- with active TB, spreading it out to even more people. May Ronald Reagan
- catch TB in Hollywood.
-
- You may have seen some rather nice public service ads from the Will Rogers
- Institute. They used to run a TB sanatorium in upstate NY; it closed after
- the last patient died, twenty or thirty years ago. The success of the
- IHN-rifampin treatment, and public health measures, had eliminated the
- threat of TB epidemics. Pressure your congressman for a strong public
- health response to the present increase, so that the Will Rogers folks
- can go on making those ads and don't have to reopen the sanatorium.
-
- I can tell much more, but I hope this answers your questions as well as
- it pushes part of my political agenda.
-
- Mark
- --
- Mark A. Fulk University of Rochester
- Computer Science Department fulk@cs.rochester.edu
-
-
-