Tuberculosis (TB) is a deadly, highly contagious disease cause by the gram positive bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The history of tuberculosis and humans has been intertwined since ancient times. There is evidence than Neolithic aged, prehistoric humans had contracted TB as early as 7000 years ago. TB can also infect animals.

Evidence of TB has also been found in bison dating back 18000 years. TB was widespread in antiquity, with evidence of the disease being found in Egyptian mummies, dating back several thousands of years. TB was also known to the ancient Greeks who called the disease phthisis. Until TB was found to be bacterial in origin, the disease was commonly referred to as consumption.

TB has been responsible for millions of deaths throughout history, taking the lives of many famous individuals including the Bronte sisters, Frederic Chopin, George Orwell, Anton Chekhov, John Keats, and Elenore Roosevelt. TB continues to be a threat to this day, even with modern medical advances and treatments.

The German bacteriologist and physicist Robert Koch isolated Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacterium that causes TB, in 1882. At the time, despite the efforts of Louis Pasteur and other leading scientists, it was common knowledge that infections happened spontaneously in humans. The idea that bacteria, viruses, or other microscopic organisms could cause disease was incomprehensible for the layman. However, as germ theory gained more proponents, and as medicine has advanced, today that line of thinking has given way to modern theories of infectious disease. Koch was awarded the 1905 Nobel Prize in medicine and physiology.

Alternate Names

Tuberculosis has several alternate names. It’s most common alias is consumption. The term consumption was coined in the 18th and 19th centuries as a way to describe TB’s wasting away effect on the human body. People stricken win the disease were consumed with coughing and fatigue during the disease’s terminal stage, leading to the common name. Tuberculosis infections often leave victims with a pale, ghost-like complexion. Because of this, TB has also been nicknamed the White Plague. In humans, the primary form of TB infection is pulmonary tuberculosis.

Symptoms

In three quarters of the cases of tuberculosis, infection occurs primarily in the lungs. This is called pulmonary tuberculosis. Symptoms include:

• Productive cough lasting over three weeks

• Chest pain

• Coughing up blood or bloody sputum

• Fever

• Chills

• Fatigue

• Weight Loss

• Pale appearance

• Loss of appetite

• Night sweats

Tuberculosis can also infect other areas outside of the lungs including the bones, blood, and central nervous system.

Causes of Tuberculosis and Means of Infection

Tuberculosis is an airborne disease, meaning that it can spread from person to person by inhaling tiny droplets of mucus and sputum. These droplets get into the air for people it inhale when an infected person coughs, spits, sneezes, or even talks. It has been shown that one sneeze or cough can release tens of thousands of microscopic droplets of bacteria-rich sputum into the air. Infection by the TB bacterium can occur by less than ten of the bacteria, so the potential for widespread infection is tremendous. The incubation period for tuberculosis is between 2-12 weeks. This is the time that it takes for a TB test to detect the disease.

Tuberculosis can lie dormant in a person’s bodies for several years. In one out of ten patients, latent TB can develop into an active TB infection. A person is only contagious if he has an active form of TB infection. Latent TB carriers cannot transmit the TB bacterium to other people. Even though infected with the tuberculosis bacterium, nine tenths of those afflicted will have latent tuberculosis. Out of those 90% of people, 10% will develop active TB in their lifetimes.

When a person inhales aerosol droplets of infected mucus, the infection begins when the bacteria reach the alveoli of the lungs. Infection usually occurs between the upper part of the lower lobe or the lower part of the upper lobe of one of the lungs. Once infection has set in, TB can spread throughout the body through the lymphatic system and blood stream.

Types of Tuberculosis

Tuberculosis (TB) is divided into two categories: pulmonary and extrapulmonary.

Pulmonary Tuberculosis Types

Primary tuberculosis pneumonia

This uncommon type of TB presents as pneumonia and is very infectious. Patients have a high fever and productive cough. It occurs most often in extremely young children and the elderly. It is also seen in patients with immunosuppression, such as HIV-infected and AIDS patients, and in patients on long term corticosteroid therapy.

Tuberculosis pleurisy

This usually develops soon after initial infection. A granuloma located at the edge of the lung ruptures into the pleural space, the space between the lungs and the chest wall. Usually, a couple of tablespoons of fluid can be found in the pleural space. Once the bacteria invade the space, the amount of fluid increases dramatically and compresses the lung, causing shortness of breath (dyspnea) and sharp chest pain that worsens with a deep breath (pleurisy). A chest x-ray shows significant amounts of fluid. Mild- or low-grade fever commonly is present. Tuberculosis pleurisy generally resolves without treatment; however, two-thirds of patients with tuberculosis pleurisy develop active pulmonary TB within 5 years.

Cavitary TB

Cavitary TB involves the upper lobes of the lung. The bacteria cause progressive lung destruction by forming cavities, or enlarged air spaces. This type of TB occurs in reactivation disease. The upper lobes of the lung are affected because they are highly oxygenated (an environment in which M. tuberculosis thrives). Cavitary TB can, rarely, occur soon after primary infection.

Symptoms include productive cough, night sweats, fever, weight loss, and weakness. There may be hemoptysis (coughing up blood). Patients with cavitary TB are highly contagious. Occasionally, disease spreads into the pleural space and causes TB empyema (pus in the pleural fluid).

Miliary TB

Miliary TB is disseminated TB. "Miliary" describes the appearance on chest x-ray of very small nodules throughout the lungs that look like millet seeds. Miliary TB can occur shortly after primary infection. The patient becomes acutely ill with high fever and is in danger of dying. The disease also may lead to chronic illness and slow decline.

Symptoms may include fever, night sweats, and weight loss. It can be difficult to diagnose because the initial chest x-ray may be normal. Patients who are immunosuppressed and children who have been exposed to the bacteria are at high risk for developing miliary TB.

Laryngeal TB

TB can infect the larynx, or the vocal chord area. It is extremely infectious.

Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis

This type of tuberculosis occurs primarily in immunocompromised patients.

Lymph node disease

Lymph nodes contain macrophages that capture the bacteria. Any lymph node can harbor uncontrolled replication of bacteria, causing the lymph node to become enlarged. The infection can develop a fistula (passageway) from the lymph node to the skin.

Tuberculosis peritonitis

M. tuberculosis can involve the outer linings of the intestines and the linings inside the abdominal wall, producing increased fluid, as in tuberculosis pleuritis. Increased fluid leads to abdominal distention and pain. Patients are moderately ill and have fever.

Tuberculosis pericarditis

The membrane surrounding the heart (the pericardium) is affected in this condition. This causes the space between the pericardium and the heart to fill with fluid, impeding the heart's ability to fill with blood and beat efficiently.

Osteal tuberculosis

Infection of any bone can occur, but one of the most common sites is the spine. Spinal infection can lead to compression fractures and deformity of the back.

Renal tuberculosis

This can cause asymptomatic pyuria (white blood cells in the urine) and can spread to the reproductive organs and affect reproduction. In men, epididymitis (inflammation of the epididymis) may occur.

Adrenal tuberculosis

TB of the adrenal glands can lead to adrenal insufficiency. Adrenal insufficiency is the inability to increase steroid production in times of stress, causing weakness and collapse.

TB meningitis

M. tuberculosis can infect the meninges (the main membrane surrounding the brain and spinal cord). This can be devastating, leading to permanent impairment and death. TB can be difficult to discern from a brain tumor because it may present as a focal mass in the brain with focal neurological signs.

Headache, sleepiness, and coma are typical symptoms. The patient may appear to have had a stroke.

Bacterium

Tuberculosis bacterium can cause the immune system to produce what is called a granulomatous inflammatory response. Put simply, this is method employed by a person’s immune system in which it attempts to build a wall around pathogens it is unable to destroy. This is done in hopes that isolating the pathogen from the other cells will cause it to die. In the case of tuberculosis, when a TB bacterium is “walled off” it forms a structure called a granuloma. These granulomas can cluster together to form nodules called tubercles or tuberculosis nodules. The TB bacterium can cause necrosis (cell death) in the tubercles, causing tissue damage to the lungs.

Tuberculosis bacteria can also spread through the body via the blood stream and/or the lymphatic system. When it does this, it can produce a systemic infection of the body, including the brain and bones. This is an extremely dangerous form of TB called miliary tuberculosis. Most often, this strikes the immune suppressed, elderly, and children.

Patients with tuberculosis can go through periods where the disease changes in its severity, shifting between good and bad periods for the patient. In this time, tissues can be destroyed and repaired although scarring occurs.

Risk Factors

A condition called silicosis may increase the risk of tuberculosis infection by a factor of 30 in people suffering from the affliction. Silicosis is an occupational hazard disease that is the result of inhaling too much silica. Silica dust is crystalline and rough in texture, which can cause inflammation and scarring in the lungs. Silicosis inhibits the function of white blood cells in the lungs. In a human, when a foreign body is detected by the immune system, specialized white blood cells are released to kill the invading pathogens.

Another risk factor for being infected with tuberculosis is being on dialysis. Because people on dialysis are generally in worse health than the rest of the population and because their immune systems may be compromised due to this weakened state, the risk of developing a TB infection increases by 10-25 times that of the normal population.

Having a low body weight in relation to height may increase the risk of becoming infected by TB by a factor of 2 to 3.

Another group that is at a higher risk of developing TB than the general population is diabetics. Diabetes, especially in patients with poorly controlled glucose and insulin levels can elevate the chances of getting a TB infection by 2-4 times.

Certain drugs may also put a person at increased risk for being infected with TB. Immunosuppressants and some rheumatoid arthritis drugs may increase the chance of infection.

Tests and Diagnosis

When confirming a case of tuberculosis, several steps are taken to develop an accurate diagnosis because many of the symptoms of TB resemble those of less serious diseases.

When a patient first presents with symptoms consistent with a diagnosis of tuberculosis, a physician will take a detailed medical history of the patient. This allows the doctor to gain an overall picture of the person’s health. A patient’s medical history may include known instances of exposure to TB, prior TB infections, and any medical conditions like silicosis that may increase the chances of being infected by tuberculosis.

Although a physician may suspect tuberculosis from the symptoms, it is impossible to make an absolute conclusion without bacterial cultures being taken. Sputum cultures are taken and smeared onto growth medium in Petri dishes. The samples are allowed to incubate for a period of time, during which the bacteria can grow and multiply. After several hours or days, the dishes are examined under a microscope by a pathologist who can determine what bacteria are present in the sample. If tuberculosis bacteria are found, that is a definitive sign that the patient is indeed infected with TB and may have an active form of it.

Chest X-rays

Chest X-rays are often helpful to chart the progression of tuberculosis but not enough on their own to make a definitive diagnosis. When an abnormal chest X-ray is obtained from a patient, a radiologist may look at the film and find indications that suggest an active case of tuberculosis. These include:

1. Patches that may indicate foreign matter

2. Holes without irregular margins

3. Nodules with hazy edges

4. Fluid

5. Enlarged lymph nodes

Evidence of inactive tuberculosis can also be found on a chest X-ray. These signs include:

1. Scar tissue

2. Nodules with distinct edges

Prevention

Preventing the spread of tuberculosis can be accomplished by treating those who are infected and those who have come in contact with the infected. Also, proper sanitation techniques such and hand washing, not touching one’s face, and wearing masks in high risks areas can help to prevent infection. A TB vaccine is available for children in high risk areas. Vaccinations of children for TB are common in developing nations that have a high rate of TB infection. Although the vaccine prevents TB in up to 80% of children, it is ineffective in protecting adults from pulmonary tuberculosis which is the most common form found in the world today.

Conclusion

Tuberculosis has been with human kind since antiquity and remains a problem to this day. In fact, tuberculosis is the most widespread disease in the world, infecting 1/3 of the world’s population. With the population of the earth nearing 6 billion people, that means that 2 billion are infected with TB. Most of these cases are latent TB, but active TB will develop in 10% of those infected. Without treatment, TB is often fatal, however, with modern antibiotics, the mortality rate of treated TB is less than 5%.

Many efforts are being made in TB research to create a vaccine that can be used universally to prevent TB in all groups. With any luck, in the near future, tuberculosis may finally be a distant memory with advancements in modern biochemistry and medicine. Until then, it is important to get screened for TB and to recognize its symptoms. Treated early and decisively, TB can be tamed, but waiting too long can lead to a less favorable outcome.

http://www.naturalremedies.org/tuberculosis/

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