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         Tuberculosis:     more books (100)
  1. Captain of All These Men Of Death: The History of Tuberculosis in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Ireland. (Clio Medica/the Wellcome Institute Series in the History of Medicine) by Greta Jones, 2001-01-01
  2. Must We All Die?: Alaska's Enduring Struggle with Tuberculosis by Robert Fortuine, 2005-03-01
  3. Tuberculosis in the United Kingdom: A Tale of Two Nations by Surinder Bakhshi, 2006-06-10
  4. Tuberculosis Pathogenesis, Protection, and Control by Barry Bloom, 1994
  5. From Chaos to Coercion: Detention and the Control of Tuberculosis by Richard J. Coker, 2000-02-19
  6. Pioneers in Medicine and Their Impact on Tuberculosis by Thomas M. Daniel, 2001-01-21
  7. The Tuberculosis Movement: A Public Health Campaign in the Progressive Era (Contributions in Medical Studies) by Michael E. Teller, 1988-04-21
  8. Implementing the WHO Stop TB Strategy: A Handbook for National Tuberculosis Control Programmes by A. Piot, P. Chaulet, 2009-04
  9. Pulmonary tuberculosis in adults and children by James Alexander Miller, 1939
  10. The Children of Craig-y-nos: Life in a Welsh Tuberculosis Sanatorium, 1922-1959 by Anne Shaw, Carole Reeves, 2009-04-20
  11. An Historical Chronology of Tuberculosis by Richard Michael Burke, 1955
  12. The Tuberculosis Survival Handbook by Paul Mayho, 2006-03-22
  13. City Of Chicago Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitarium: Its History And Provisions (1915) by Theodore Bernard Sachs, 2010-05-22
  14. The Action Of Sunlight Upon Bacteria With Special Reference To B. Tuberculosis: The Action Of A High Dry Climate In The Cure Of Tuberculosis (1907) by John Weinzirl, 2010-05-23

61. Southeastern National Tuberculosis Center
This annual event commemorates the date in 1882 when Dr. Robert Koch announced his discovery of M. tuberculosis, the bacteria that cause TB.
http://sntc.medicine.ufl.edu/

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First Name Last Name Email * Jurisdiction Select your location Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Virginia Puerto Rico U.S. Virgin Islands Other Discipline Select your discipline Administrative Staff Case Manager Clinician Educator Epidemiologist Field Services Lab Staff LPN MD/DO Nutrition Staff Outreach Worker PA/ARNP Pharmacy Staff Respiratory Care Staff RN Social Worker Support Staff Other (*) required field Health Department Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Virginia Puerto Rico U.S. Virgin Islands National TB Centers Francis J. Curry (West) Heartland (Mid-West) New Jersey (Northeast) LTBI Webinar on June 24 - Spanish
Conducted in Spanish - Learn more about LTBI. Topics include epidemiology, diagnosis, and treatment of LTBI.
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NEW - Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis: A Survival Guide for Clinicians, 2nd ed.
This is a joint publication of the Curry National Tuberculosis Center and the TB Control Branch of the California Department of Public Health. It is an essential tool for clinicians.
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Managing Drug Interactions in the Treatment of HIV-Related Tuberculosis
Now Available. The purpose of this document is to provide the clinician with updated recommendations for managing the drug-drug interactions that occur when using antiretroviral therapy during tuberculosis treatment.

62. Tuberculosis Program
tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death from contagious disease in the world and therefore subject to intense surveillance.
http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/dc/TB/tbhome.html
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Tuberculosis Program
Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death from contagious disease in the world and therefore subject to intense surveillance. The staff collects demographic and clinical data from each case and monitors TB incidence for indications of outbreaks among various populations in the state.
Tuberculosis surveillance
Contact investigations
Genotyping
Other Resources
Tuberculosis Program
Division of Disease Control and Environmental Epidemiology
Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
DCEED-TB-A3
4300 Cherry Creek Drive South
Denver CO 80246-1530

63. The Making Of A Social Disease
Barnes, David S. The Making of a Social Disease tuberculosis in NineteenthCentury France. Berkeley University of California Press,
http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft8t1nb5rp/
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64. Redirect
tuberculosis (TB) is a bacterial disease primarily of the lungs. It is airborne and spread when someone with active TB disease coughs, laughs or sings.
http://www.dhs.state.or.us/publichealth/tb/

65. USDA - APHIS - Animal Health - Tuberculosis
tuberculosis (TB) is a contagious disease of both animals and humans. It is caused by three specific types of bacteria that are part of the Mycobacterium
http://www.aphis.usda.gov/animal_health/animal_diseases/tuberculosis/
Select an Option Academic Researchers Animal Health Professionals General Citizens Government Partners Interest Groups Media Plant Health Professionals Students APHIS Employees (Intranet) You are here: Animal Health Animal Diseases Animal Health Tuberculosis Disease Information Tuberculosis in Cattle and Bison Tuberculosis (TB) is a contagious disease of both animals and humans. It is caused by three specific types of bacteria that are part of the Mycobacterium group: Mycobacterium bovis, M. avium, and M. tuberculosis. Bovine TB, caused by M. bovis, can be transmitted from livestock to humans and other animals. No other TB organism has as great a host range as bovine TB, which can infect all warm blooded vertebrates. M. avium can affect all species of birds, as well as hogs and cattle. M. tuberculosis primarily affects humans but can also be transmitted to hogs, cattle, and dogs. Bovine TB has affected animal and human health since antiquity. Once the most prevalent infectious disease of cattle and swine in the United States, bovine TB caused more losses among U.S. farm animals in the early part of this century than all other infectious diseases combined. Begun in 1917, the Cooperative State-Federal Tuberculosis Eradication Program, which is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), State animal health agencies, and U.S. livestock producers, has nearly eradicated bovine TB from the Nation's livestock population. This disease's presence in humans has been reduced as a result of the eradication program, advances in sanitation and hygiene, the discovery of effective drugs, and pasteurization of milk.

66. AllAfrica.com: Côte D'Ivoire: Tuberculosis Infections Spreading (Page 1 Of 1)
Mar 4, 2008 allAfrica African news and information for a global audience.
http://allafrica.com/stories/200803040659.html
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67. Indiana State Department Of Health -
Indiana tuberculosis Reports. 2006 Adobe PDF Document 2005 Adobe PDF Document 2004 Adobe PDF Document
http://www.in.gov/isdh/dataandstats/tuberculosis/tb_index.htm

68. Top Navigation
The goal of the Johns Hopkins Center for tuberculosis Research (CTR), founded in 1998, is to contribute to global tuberculosis control through a range of
http://www.jhsph.edu/dept/IH/Centers/TB_Research.html
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Center for Tuberculosis Research Richard Chaisson, Director
William Bishai, Deputy Director The goal of the Johns Hopkins Center for Tuberculosis Research (CTR), founded in 1998, is to contribute to global tuberculosis control through a range of research initiatives in epidemiology, clinical trials, drug development, diagnostics, vaccine development, pathogenesis, and basic biology. The Center strives to be an internationally recognized center of excellence for research, training and clinical practice. The Center's faculty is drawn from six departments in the Schools of Public Health and Medicine, with a research portfolio that is broad and interdisciplinary. Its major strengths are molecular biology, epidemiology, clinical trials, and drug development; additional areas of emphasis include animal models, pathogenesis, vaccine development, behavioral research, immunology, and diagnostics. Research involves collaboration across disciplines, sharing of resources, and information dissemination through seminars. The Center utilizes the laboratory facilities of the School of Public Health, the School of Medicine, and the Johns Hopkins Hospital. The flagship clinical research site is the Baltimore City Health Department Eastern Chest Clinic, which supports clinical and epidemiological trials as well as clinical and public health training. In addition, international research sites in developing countries such as Haiti, South Africa, Brazil, Peru, and Thailand provide venues for applied research with support from USAID and other funders.

69. Institute For Tuberculosis Research
The Institute for tuberculosis Research is comprised of approximately 30 individuals biologists, chemists, pharmacologists and support staff all working
http://www.uic.edu/pharmacy/research/itr/
Institute for Tuberculosis Research
About the Institute
The Institute for Tuberculosis Research is comprised of approximately 30 individuals: biologists, chemists, pharmacologists and support staff - all working towards a single goal - the discovery of new drugs for tuberculosis. We come from Austria, Brazil, China, Germany, India, Iran, Japan, Korea, Netherlands, Romania, Russia, Thailand, U.S. and Vietnam. Our group includes faculty (5), affiliate faculty (3), adjunct faculty (2), BS, MS and PhD staff scientists (8), graduate students (6) and support staff (2 full-time, 5 part-time). We occupy 4,000 sq. ft. of labs and offices in the College of Pharmacy.
Our work is supported by the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development, the National Institutes of Health, fee-for-service arrangements from industry and a patent royalty stream. In 2006 we received over one million dollars in grants and contracts.
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70. Tuberculosis: Surprising Strain
PI Editorial Congress and President Bush should include a beefedup attack on tuberculosis as they renew his international anti-AIDS initiative.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/354191_tbed.html
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Tuberculosis: Surprising strain
Congress and President Bush should include a beefed-up attack on tuberculosis in the renewal of his international anti-AIDS initiative. Fighting tuberculosis in poverty-stricken parts of the globe goes hand in hand with combating the AIDS pandemic and protecting public health in Seattle. A new World Health Organization report found surprisingly rapid growth in the dangerous strains of TB resistant to multiple types of drugs. The worst TB, extremely drug resistant, has shown up in 45 countries, including the United States. In an era of constant air travel and globalization, TB cases can cross borders in hours. Seattle Biomedical Research Institute scientist David Sherman said that, unlike many diseases, infection with TB can be as simple as getting on the same bus with someone who has an active case. The House Foreign Affairs Committee has passed a renewal of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief with strong provisions for fighting TB, a prime killer of HIV-infected people. The measure also envisions spending as much as

71. Tuberculosis - Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
The foundation’s tuberculosis (TB) grantmaking focuses on the following areas Preventing and treating TB through research to discover, develop,
http://www.gatesfoundation.org/GlobalHealth/Pri_Diseases/Tuberculosis/TB_Grantma
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  • Preventing and treating TB through research to discover, develop, and clinically test the following:
    • More accurate and rapid diagnostics for resource-poor settings.
    • More effective vaccines to prevent TB infection.
    • More effective drugs and shorter regimens to treat active disease.
    Demonstrating the effectiveness of innovative strategies to fight TB, including effective ways to manage TB in areas heavily affected by HIV.
  • Accelerating access to new tools by securing adequate financing for product introduction, and by overcoming market and systemic barriers to product procurement, distribution, and access.
  • Advocating to increase financial support and build commitment and awareness among decision makers and opinion leaders, emphasizing the burden of TB, the link between TB and HIV/AIDS, and the need for greater resources for TB research and control. (See also the Advocacy section of

72. Global Fund Tackles AIDS, Tuberculosis And Malaria - International Herald Tribun
Mar 12, 2008 Global Fund tackles AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/03/11/business/glob12.php
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    MANAGING GLOBALIZATION
    Global Fund tackles AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria
    By Daniel Altman Published: March 12, 2008 document.writeln(''); E-Mail Article Listen to Article Printer-Friendly 3-Column Format Translate Share Article Text Size NEW YORK When you ask experts in economic development about the prerequisites for lifting people out of poverty, health always comes near the top of the list. In countries that do not have to struggle with war or civil conflict, academic research has shown that improvements with public health are often the first step toward higher living standards. But in such regions, how can treatments and care best be delivered? The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria thinks it has the answer. The organization is a nongovernmental organization, bankrolled by governments, international institutions and private donors, whose goal is to select the best programs for delivering treatment - primarily in sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and Asia - and then to finance those programs under supervision. The fund has raised billions of dollars and millions of people are being treated. But some experts still doubt whether a centralized financing mechanism is the best way to fight the three epidemic diseases.

73. GBC — Global Business Coalition On HIV/AIDS, TB And Malaria
GBC is comprised of more than 220 companies working to maximize their impact in the fight against HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria.
http://www.businessfightsaids.org/
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74. Improved Diagnostic Evaluation Of Suspected Tuberculosis -- Dosanjh Et Al. 148 (
Background The role of new Tcell–based blood tests for tuberculosis in the diagnosis of active tuberculosis is unclear.
http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/148/5/325
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Improved Diagnostic Evaluation of Suspected Tuberculosis
Davinder P.S. Dosanjh, DPhil Timothy S.C. Hinks, MD John A. Innes, MD Jonathan J. Deeks, PhD ... Ajit Lalvani, DM
Background: for tuberculosis in the diagnosis of active tuberculosis is unclear. Objective: To compare the performance of 2 interferon- assays and tuberculin skin testing in adults with suspected tuberculosis. Design: Prospective study conducted in routine practice. Setting: 2 urban hospitals in the United Kingdom. Patients: 389 adults, predominantly of South Asian and black

75. Tuberculosis - Index - Pulmonologychannel
tuberculosis (TB) is responsible for the deaths of more youths and adults than any other infectious disease. tuberculosis is a highly contagious disease
http://www.pulmonologychannel.com/tuberculosis/index.shtml

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Tuberculosis
Overview, Pathology
Physician developed and monitored. Original source: www.pulmonologychannel.com
Original Date of Publication: 01 Jun 2000
Reviewed by: Stanley J. Swierzewski, III, M.D.
Last Reviewed: 04 Dec 2007 Home Tuberculosis Overview, Pathology Overview In 1993, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared tuberculosis a global emergency. Tuberculosis (TB) is responsible for more deaths than any other infectious disease. Once called consumption, TB is a highly contagious, persistent disease characterized by the formation of hard grayish nodules, or tubercles. The disease is most often caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis and usually occurs in the lungs (the initial site of infection), but it also can occur in other organs.
Because its signs and symptoms are easily confused with those of many other (usually respiratory) diseases, tuberculosis can be difficult to diagnose. Common symptoms are cough that is worse in the morning and may include hemoptysis (i.e., blood in the sputum), chest pain, night sweats, and breathlessness (dyspnea). Ninety percent of those infected with M. tuberculosis

76. Improved Tuberculosis Screening Test For HIV Victims
World Health Organization (WHO) figures show that each year an estimated 9 million new cases of tuberculosis (TB) arise in the world.
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/99711.php
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Improved Tuberculosis Screening Test For HIV Victims
Main Category: HIV / AIDS
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For the first cohort, 285 adults newly infected by HIV and showing no clinical or radiological sign of TB were selected at the Fann National University Hospital Centre (Dakar) between 2003 and 2004. An ELISPOT test and a TST were performed for each patient at the beginning of the study. The TST indicated that 21% (53/247) of them had a TB infection at the moment of the test. However, this proportion reached 51% (125/247) with the ELISPOT test. It appears therefore that the latter is more sensitive than the TST whatever the stage of development of the disease. Nevertheless the ability to respond to the ELISPOT test decreases with the decrease in CD4 lymphocyte count, which appears to indicate the limits of this type of test in severely immunosuppressed individuals, as advanced-stage HIV infected patients can be.
In parallel, a cohort of 243 TB patients was followed up for 2 years. The objective this time was to determine the ability of the ELISPOT test to predict, among people living in contact with these individuals, those who run the greatest risk of developing the disease. Between January 2004 and March 2005, 3072 contacts were identified for the whole set of TB patients. Preliminary results showed the sensitivity of the two tests to be comparable with this cohort, although ELISPOT is doted with a better specificity since it is not influenced by recent BCG vaccination.

77. Rx For Survival . Deadly Diseases . Tuberculosis | PBS
When German biologist and doctor Robert Koch announced in 1882 that he had discovered the bacterial cause of tuberculosis, he said, If the number of
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An estimated one billion people died from tuberculosis between 1700 and 1900. Even after Koch dispelled the myth that "bad air" brought about the disease by revealing its microbial cause, for decades the recommended treatment remained rest and fresh air at a sanatorium. Among those who lost their lives to TB were writers Fyodor Dostoevsky and Jane Austen, composer Frederic Chopin, and Presidents Andrew Jackson and Ulysses S. Grant. Also known as the "white plague," tuberculosis is a contagious, airborne bacterial disease transmitted through coughing, sneezing, and talking. Even singing or laughing at close range can be dangerous. Tiny microbe-filled water droplets are expelled by one person and inhaled by another. Still, extended close contact is necessary to transmit the bacteria. A healthy adult spending eight hours a day for six months with an infected person has a 50 percent chance of becoming infected. Alarmingly, each person who has active TB may infect on average 10 to 20 others, often family members and caretakers. Tuberculosis symptoms start with a persistent cough, fever, and night sweats. The bacteria spread rapidly, most often to the lungs, leading to tissue damage and a bloody cough. In about 15 percent of cases, the disease may spread to other parts of the body, including lymph nodes, the gastrointestinal tract, bones, and joints.

78. Communicable Disease Control - Health And Human Services
The Division of tuberculosis Prevention and Control seeks to reduce the incidence of tuberculosis (TB) through surveillance, education and clinical services
http://www.mass.gov/dph/cdc/tb/
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    The Bureau of Communicable Disease Control (BCDC) strives to improve the quality of life of all Massachusetts residents through the elimination of communicable diseases. The Bureau is comprised of the Divisions of Tuberculosis Prevention and Control, Sexually Transmitted Disease Prevention, Epidemiology and Immunization as well as the HIV/AIDS Surveillance and Refugee and Immigrant Health Programs.
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79. Explore The Microscopic World Of Health Science
tuberculosis (TB) is caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Thin section transmission electron micrograph of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
http://www.wadsworth.org/databank/mycotubr.htm
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Disease Carriers
Bacteria: Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis and is annually responsible for nearly two million deaths worldwide. A third of the world's population is currently infected with the TB bacillus, and more than eight million new cases are diagnosed each year.

80. Tuberculosis & HIV - The Body
Prevention and Treatment of tuberculosis Among Patients Infected With Human Immunodeficiency Virus Principles of Therapy and Revised Recommendations (PDF)
http://www.thebody.com/index/treat/tubercul.html
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