Saturday, March 28, 2009

Tuberculosis on the rise - again.

Now this subject made me shudder. Why, you might ask??? Because I know what it is like to have this rotten bloody disease. I was found to have it when I was 4 years old. I apparently got it from family members who had been in the wars.
As the youngest of 5 children, and born to parents who were in their late 30's, I was just seen as a sickly kid who always had a cold. It wasn't even picked up with all the bloody noses I would have and vomit up blood through the night. My parents just thought as I often had nose bleeds, that it would happen in my sleep, thus swallowing the blood and vomit it up. (Gross yeah).. It was however, picked up when my parent's bedroom walls were covered in blood clots from my projectile vomiting in the middle of the night. This was the beginning of my next year and a half in hospital, isolated from my family. My sisters would have to wave to me through the ward window. The treatment was totally gross back then. Tubes down my throat, up my nose, injections all the time, pills that would choke a bloody horse. After the first year and my 5th birthday in hospital, I would gradually be allowed to have some weekend visits home, then when I was released from the hospital I was confined to bed rest and light activity and huge tins of horse choking pills. I remember in the 1980's there were a few cases of TB detected in Victoria, well I can tell you, I was at the TB Clinic getting X-Rays quick smart.. I was terrified of ever getting it again. Australia used to have compulsory vaccinations for this. TB was eventually eradicated from our vocabulary and hospitals resulting in no more compulsory testing or vaccinations.
Now if our Immigration Policy is such that they are going to be letting infected people in this country without the proper screenings, and especially all the African migrants/refugees etc. Then surely we need to be doing something about re-introducing screenings and vaccinations against this horrible disease.

How about refusing entry to anyone with any type of infectious disease. That would suit me perfectly!!!!!


Resurgent Tuberculosis Deadly Disease of Globalization
by Christine Craig
BIOLOGY & MEDICINE 21st CENTURY Science & Technology Spring/Summer 2007 73

http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com


Two epidemiological reports released in the last few months on the extent of extensively drug resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) in South Africa, are critical warnings of the global threat of this virtually incurable disease, especially in conjunction with its “companion” ailment, HIV/AIDS.
TB in any form is not some rare, exotic ailment, but an illness whose onset and transmissibility have long
been understood. With decent infrastructure and living conditions, TB could have been contained and driven
back to almost nil incidence. However, with the last three decades of international decline in economic conditions, affecting concentrations of people in Africa and Asia, and in localized areas in the Americas and Europe, the resurgence of TB, with its deadly mutations, was predictable.1
On Sept. 16, 2006, the Department of Health for South Africa issued a horrifying report on the presence of XDR-TB,2 including the situation in KwaZulu- Natal. Certain patients at the Church of Scotland Hospital in Tugela Ferry were found, in the Fall of 2005, to be infected with a strain of TB not responding to any
treatment. A survey over the following 12 months, turned up 53 patients, almost all co-infected with HIV, who
were suffering from untreatable TB which, in the immune-compromised patients, was quickly fatal. All but one of the 53 died within three weeks of diagnosis. Those 53 victims represented 16 percent of all confirmed cases of XDRTB globally during 2006. This bombshell report conjured up images of a catastrophe in the making in the AIDS-wracked areas of South Africa, precipitating a flurry of meetings among
international health professionals, and leading to the creation of the World Health Organization (WHO) Global XDR-TB Task Force, which convened in October to address the threat of untreatable TB in the age of HIV. The Global XDR-TB Task Force found, to its horror (but no great surprise) that, in the renewed war against a strengthening foe, the ammunition was low, and the supply lines were cut. Although warnings had been out since the early 1990s that multi-drug resistant (MDR) TB was a rising threat, as evidenced by
the well-documented outbreaks in the United States and in Eastern Europe during the late 1980s, no agencies had really taken it seriously as a global danger at the time.
XDR-TB is now considered endemic in the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa. In the January 2007 issue of PLoS Medicine, J.A. Singh et al. presented a truly frightening view of the situation.
More than 30 new cases are detected each month, with a total of more than 300 cases, and the disease has been reported in 39 hospitals, plus other areas of the province. And that is just the official tally, which most certainly understates the case, as many of the poor never seek medical help. The authors note: “In recognition of the global threat posed by these factors, on September 9, 2006, WHO urged a
response to the outbreak akin to recent global efforts to control severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and the bird flu....”


Europe’s White Plague
That the Western world would be so shocked and surprised by this turn of events is remarkable in itself, considering that, just two centuries ago, tuberculosis was so virulent in Europe that many 72 Spring/Summer 2007 21st CENTURY Science & Technology BIOLOGY & MEDICINE feared it would destroy Western civilization. The list of artists, philosophers, and scientists who suffered or died from TB is endless, including
Friedrich Schiller, Percy Shelley, Bernhard Riemann, John Keats, and Vladimir Vernadsky.
It is estimated that in 1800, the death rate per year from tuberculosis in Western Europe (and in urban North America) was 1 percent. At the peak of the long epidemic, perhaps 25 percent of Western Europeans
died of tuberculosis. There was no cure for the disease, nor was the causative agent known at that time.
And yet, over the next two centuries, “consumption” (as it was known) lost its grip on the European continent, slowly and steadily receding, even in the absence of any satisfactory medical treatments for the disease. Those with active disease were still very likely to die, but fewer were getting active disease.
It has been just 125 years since the famed bacteriologist and Göttingen-trained physician Robert Koch identified and characterized the minuscule tuberculosis bacillus in his home laboratory in Berlin, in 1881, proving it to be the source of the disease, and giving hope that the TB leviathan then devouring the
European populace, could be brought down by science.

It has been almost 100 years since the discovery of the only vaccine ever developed against tuberculosis—the Bacille Calmette Guèrin (BCG) vaccine, based on a highly attenuated Mycobacterium bovis strain—a vaccine found to give some protection to children against the gruesome childhood killers, miliary tuberculosis and tubercular meningitis. It has been only some 60 years since the development of the first effective antibiotics against tuberculosis: streptomycin and para-amino salicylic acid (PAS), discovered by Selman Waksman and Jorgen Lehmann, respectively, around the end of World War II.

By 1960, a team led by Dr. John Crofton of Edinburgh, had successfully tackled the recalcitrant tuberculosis problem in Scotland with a remarkable protocol using triple-antibiotic therapy in an 18-month-long treatment regimen, which could successfully cure even advanced pulmonary tuberculosis cases caused by drug-resistant strains. And, under the joint control of the British Medical Research Council and the WHO, trials of Crofton’s methods had been carried out in Madras, India among the poor—with astounding success. Policy makers, including scientists, began to believe that TB could be tackled by drug technology alone, even without costly investments in economic development and public health infrastructure! A mere five years later, tuberculosis had already been dropped from courses at the Harvard School of Public Health, a disease deemed no longer important in the training of future health-care professionals. Science had won, and tuberculosis, long the scourge of Europe and the U.S., receded from the consciousness of the populace (Figure 1).

The world didn’t really take notice of tuberculosis again as a global problem until the second half of the 1980s, when the long trend of TB incidence- decrease in developed countries was shattered by a sudden upward tick in notifications, noted most strongly in the United States and in post- Soviet Eastern Europe. The situation was documented in great detail in the United States by outraged public health professionals, especially in New York City, where most of the increase was occurring (Figure 2).3

The Nature of the Beast
Tuberculosis is usually caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, an ingenious and insidious organism: a minuscule bacterium hardly bigger than a virus, surrounded by an impervious waxy coat. In many of its features within the host body it acts similarly to the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), secreting
itself within immune cells called phagocytes, the very cells that would otherwise seek it out and destroy it.
Within the phagocyte, the tubercular bacillus hides in the central vacuole, protected from chemical destruction by its waxy coat. Here it grows and reproduces very slowly, and is spread with the phagocytes throughout the lymphatic system. Most often, the disease affects adults in its pulmonary form. Children are often afflicted with primary infections affecting the lymphatic system or other organs, including a rapidly fatal systemic form called military tuberculosis. During the host’s first (primary) infection with TB, a battle with the immune system ensues, and, almost always, the immune system wins, at least in the short term. The infection becomes “latent.”


This is a partial pdf of the article. To purchase the entire issue, please use the link below:

http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com

5 comments:

  1. Hi CN,

    Australia's public health procedures have become deplorable with a capital D. I have been following the dismantling of protections over time to now allow for example people with AIDS from Africa to come to Australia and I've read academic papers on the large numbers of people from SE Asia who have untreated intestinal parasties come to Australia - with no medical intervention or followup. Feel like eating out in Footscray? I don't think so .........

    Australia no longer cares about public health and safety.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yeah I tend to avoid F/scray these days. St. Albans and S/shine are becoming very largely populated by Christian Africans and muslims...a real bad combo. Gees when I was young and lived in B/Brook, then West F/scray that is the only shopping centre I knew apart from the City.
    Now, having said that, I must say that not all people from Africa are riddled with diseases. Especially if they are from Nth East Africa, being Eritrae, Ethiopia etc.
    I work within a Community dealing with some of these people, and they are very nice people. The only ones I know of though are Christians, and most of them being of the Pentecostal denomination. Of which I am not. However, I only hear from news stories about disease ridden people from Sudan etc that like to spread their HIV around (purposely to stupid Western women,)and those that have other diseases. Believe me, if I even caught a whiff of any disease in the people I work with then I would be out of there in a jif.

    I suppose too, that we have white people who are just as bad in spreading their diseases around, but FFS, when are our dumbass pollies gonna put a stop to this, and put a stop to unscreened immigration. How about the just put a stop to all African and Middle east people coming here, legally or by boat.
    Thanks for visiting again.... CNanna

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi CN,

    I find it baffling that Africans with HIV are able to come in on "humanitarian" grounds. and that people with all sorts of parasties are let loose in our communities. Most people are totally unaware that our communities have become very unsafe in this regard.

    I have heard medical staff saying they are seeing "things" now they have never seen before.

    One cannot blame these people who have these desease but our own lazy government who does not care to screen, quarantine and treat these people. Unbelievable!

    Meanwhile, if you want to import some chocolates or peanuts from another country, that's going to be difficult. Go figure!

    ReplyDelete
  4. LOL, yeah I have a friend who is a Native American and he wanted to send me some things, but it would not have been allowed to send then to me,one item was a genuine Eagles feather that had been used in certain ceremonies for example. I am surprised people are even permitted to wear shoes on a plane when coming back into Australia from foreign countrys or remote and exotic places...I mean, they could have any little bug in the grooves of their shoes, and worse, any type of parasite/germ/bug/disease festering in their insides that symptoms won't be showing for a week or two.Or they will be just a carrier, non-symptomatic and contracted by others unaware. it's a dreadful thought, but I also believe there have been many cases, just covered up, and when people start getting ill and presenting to their doctors or hospitals, it is not known what is causing such symptoms and so the good old anti-biotics forte are prescribed. Many doctors are young, and so would not have the experience as older doctors would have of picking up illnesses such as TB.
    Ah, the price we pay for modernity.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi CN,

    I came across this little article on a man spreading HIV to his unsuspecting partner:
    http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/2299576/HIV-man-arrested-for-unprotected-sex
    As you say, its a totally different world from the one I grew up with when the govt actually protected its citizens from illness and disease as best it could. Its every man for himself now!

    ReplyDelete