Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

TB Symptoms


Background


Tuberculosis (abbreviated as TB for tubercle bacillus or TuBerculosis) is a common and deadly infectious disease caused by mycobacteria, mainly Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Tuberculosis most commonly attacks the lungs (as pulmonary TB) but can also affect the central nervous system, the lymphatic system, the circulatory system, the genitourinary system, bones, joints and even the skin. Other mycobacteria such as Mycobacterium bovis, Mycobacterium africanum, Mycobacterium canetti, and Mycobacterium microti can also cause tuberculosis, but these species do not usually infect healthy adults.

Over one-third of the world's population now carries the TB bacterium, and new infections occur at a rate of one per second. Not everyone infected develops the full-blown disease, so asymptomatic, latent TB infection is most common. However, one in ten latent infections will progress to active TB disease, which, if left untreated, kills more than half of its victims.

In 2004, mortality and morbidity statistics included 14.6 million chronic active TB cases, 8.9 million new cases, and 1.6 million deaths, mostly in developing countries. In addition, a rising number of people in the developed world are contracting tuberculosis because their immune systems are compromised by immunosuppressive drugs, substance abuse or HIV/AIDS.

Symptoms

When the disease becomes active, 75% of the cases are pulmonary TB. Symptoms include chest pain, coughing up blood, and a productive, prolonged cough for more than three weeks. Systemic symptoms include fever, chills, night sweats, appetite loss, weight loss, pallor, and often a tendency to fatigue very easily.

In the other 25% of active cases, the infection moves from the lungs, causing other kinds of TB more common in immunosuppressed persons and young children. Extrapulmonary infection sites include the pleura, the central nervous system in meningitis, the lymphatic system in scrofula of the neck, the genitourinary system in urogenital tuberculosis, and bones and joints in Pott's disease of the spine. An especially serious form is disseminated TB, more commonly known as miliary tuberculosis. Although extrapulmonary TB is not contagious, it may co-exist with pulmonary TB, which is contagious.


Prevention

TB prevention and control takes two parallel approaches. In the first, people with TB and their contacts are identified and then treated. Identification of infections often involves testing high-risk groups for TB. In the second approach, children are vaccinated to protect them from TB. Unfortunately, no vaccine is available that provides reliable protection for adults. However, in tropical areas where the incidence of atypical mycobacteria is high, exposure to nontuberculous mycobacteria gives some protection against TB.

Vaccines

Many countries use BCG vaccine as part of their TB control programs, especially for infants. This was the first vaccine for TB and developed at the Pasteur Institute in France between 1905 and 1921. However, mass vaccination with BCG did not start until after World War II. The protective efficacy of BCG for preventing serious forms of TB (e.g. meningitis) in children is greater than 80%; its protective efficacy for preventing pulmonary TB in adolescents and adults is variable, ranging from 0 to 80%.

In South Africa, the country with the highest prevalence of TB, BCG is given to all children under the age of three. However, the effectiveness of BCG is lower in areas where mycobacteria are less prevalent, therefore BCG is not given to the entire population in these countries. In the USA, for example, BCG vaccine is not recommended except for people who meet specific criteria:

  • Infants or children with negative skin-test result who are continually exposed to untreated or ineffectively treated patients or will be continually exposed to multidrug-resistant TB.
  • Healthcare workers considered on an individual basis in settings in which high percentage of MDR-TB patients has been found, transmission of MDR-TB is likely, and TB control precautions have been implemented and not successful.

Several new vaccines to prevent TB infection are being developed. The first recombinant tuberculosis vaccine entered clinical trials in the United States in 2004, sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). A 2005 study showed that a DNA TB vaccine given with conventional chemotherapy can accelerate the disappearance of bacteria as well as protect against re-infection in mice; it may take four to five years to be available in humans. A very promising TB vaccine, MVA85A, is currently in phase II trials in South Africa by a group led by Oxford University, and is based on a genetically modified vaccinia virus. Because of the limitations of current vaccines, researchers and policymakers are promoting new economic models of vaccine development including prizes, tax incentives and advance market commitments.

Source: Wikipedia.org


How to take good care of your health

Each year more than 91.6 million people die of different types of diseases, and many of them die because they did not know they had it until too late. Therefore, it is imperative that people, young or old, learn of the different symptoms of the major diseases so that when they see or experience it, they can inform their doctor and receive appropriate treatment immediately. The purpose of this blog site is to provide information on disease symptoms and preventions. Provided below is a table listing diseases by death rate.

Group




Cause


Percent
of
deaths






Deaths per 100,000 per year













All

Male Female




All causes


100.00





916.1

954.7 877.1
A



Cardiovascular diseases


29.34





268.8

259.3 278.4
B



Infectious and parasitic diseases


19.12





175.2

185.1 165.1
A.1



Ischemic heart disease


12.64





115.8

121.4 110.1
C



Malignant neoplasms (cancers)


12.49





114.4

126.9 101.7
A.2



Cerebrovascular disease (Stroke)


9.66





88.5

81.4 95.6
B.1



Respiratory infections


6.95





63.7

63.5 63.8
B.1.1



Lower respiratory tract infections


6.81





62.4

62.2 62.6
D



Respiratory diseases


6.49





59.5

61.1 57.9
E



Unintentional injuries


6.23





57.0

73.7 40.2
B.2



HIV/AIDS


4.87





44.6

46.2 43.0
D.1



Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease


4.82





44.1

45.1 43.1




Perinatal conditions


4.32





39.6

43.7 35.4
F



Digestive diseases


3.45





31.6

34.9 28.2
B.3



Diarrheal diseases


3.15





28.9

30.0 27.8
G



Intentional injuries (suicide, murder, war, etc.)


2.84





26.0

37.0 14.9
B.4



Tuberculosis


2.75





25.2

32.9 17.3
B.5



Malaria


2.23





20.4

19.4 21.5
C.1



Lung cancers


2.18





20.0

28.4 11.4
E.1



Road traffic accidents


2.09





19.1

27.8 10.4
B.6



Childhood diseases


1.97





18.1

18.0 18.2
H



Neuropsychiatric disorders


1.95





17.9

18.4 17.3




Diabetes mellitus


1.73





15.9

14.1 17.7
A.3



Hypertensive heart disease


1.60





14.6

13.4 15.9
G.1



Suicide


1.53





14.0

17.4 10.6
C.2



Stomach cancer


1.49





13.7

16.7 10.5
I



Diseases of the genitourinary system


1.49





13.6

14.1 13.1
F.1



Cirrhosis of the liver


1.38





12.6

16.1 9.1
I.1



Nephritis/nephropathy


1.19





10.9

11.0 10.7
C.3



Colorectal cancer


1.09





10.0

10.3 9.7
C.4



Liver cancer


1.08





9.9

13.6 6.2
B.6.1



Measles


1.07





9.8

9.8 9.9
G.2



Violence


0.98





9.0

14.2 3.7




Maternal conditions


0.89





8.2

0.0 16.5




Congenital abnormalities


0.86





7.9

8.1 7.7
J



Nutritional deficiencies


0.85





7.8

6.9 8.7
C.5



Breast cancer


0.84





7.7

0.1 15.3
C.6



Esophageal cancer


0.78





7.2

9.1 5.2
A.4



Inflammatory heart disease


0.71





6.5

6.7 6.2
H.1



Alzheimer's disease and other dementias


0.70





6.4

4.7 8.1
E.2



Falls


0.69





6.3

7.5 5.0
E.3



Drowning


0.67





6.1

8.4 3.9
E.4



Poisoning


0.61





5.6

7.2 4.0
C.7



Lymphomas, multiple myeloma


0.59





5.4

5.4 5.4
A.5



Rheumatic heart disease


0.57





5.3

4.4 6.1
C.8



Oral cancers and oropharynx cancers


0.56





5.1

7.1 3.1
E.5



Fires


0.55





5.0

3.8 6.2
B.6.2



Pertussis


0.52





4.7

4.7 4.8
C.9



Prostate cancer


0.47





4.3

8.6 0.0
C.10



Leukemia


0.46





4.2

4.7 3.8
F.2



Peptic ulcer disease


0.46





4.2

5.0 3.5
J.1



Protein-energy malnutrition


0.46





4.2

4.2 4.2




Endocrine/nutritional disorders


0.43





3.9

3.4 4.4
D.2



Asthma


0.42





3.9

3.9 3.8
C.11



Cervical cancer


0.42





3.8

0.0 7.7
C.12



Pancreatic cancer


0.41





3.7

3.9 3.5
B.6.3



Tetanus


0.38





3.4

3.4 3.5
B.7



Sexually transmitted diseases excluding HIV


0.32





2.9

2.9 2.9
C.13



Bladder cancer


0.31





2.9

4.0 1.7
B.8



Meningitis


0.30





2.8

2.9 2.7
G.3



War


0.30





2.8

5.0 0.5
B.7.1



Syphilis


0.28





2.5

2.7 2.3




Neoplasms other than malignant


0.26





2.4

2.4 2.4
J.2



Iron deficiency anemia


0.24





2.2

1.5 2.9
C.14



Ovarian cancer


0.24





2.2

0.0 4.4
B.9



Tropical diseases


0.23





2.1

2.5 1.6
H.2



Epilepsy


0.22





2.0

2.2 1.8




Musculoskeletal diseases


0.19





1.7

1.2 2.2
B.10



Hepatitis B


0.18





1.7

2.3 1.0
H.3



Parkinson's disease


0.17





1.6

1.6 1.6
H.4



Alcohol use disorders


0.16





1.5

2.5 0.4
H.5



Drug use disorders


0.15





1.4

2.2 0.5
B.1.2



Upper respiratory infections


0.13





1.2

1.2 1.2
C.15



Uterine cancer


0.12





1.1

0.0 2.3




Skin diseases


0.12





1.1

0.8 1.4
C.16



Melanoma and other skin cancers


0.12





1.1

1.1 1.0
B.11



Hepatitis C


0.09





0.9

1.1 0.6
B.9.1



Leishmaniasis


0.09





0.8

1.0 0.7
B.9.2



Trypanosomiasis


0.08





0.8

1.0 0.5
I.2



Benign prostatic hyperplasia


0.06





0.5

1.0 0.0

1.^ Group is a value showing the relationship of groups of causes. For instance, statistics for "A" (cardiovascular diseases) include those for "A.1" (ischemic heart disease), "A.2" (cerebrovascular disease), and so on. If no value is shown for a cause, there are no other causes grouped with that cause.

Source: World Health Organization, 2004.