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         Tuberculosis:     more books (100)
  1. Tuberculosis Case-finding and Chemotherapy by World Health Organization, 1979-05
  2. Early pulmonary tuberculosis;: Diagnosis, prognosis and treatment; by John Bromham Hawes, 1913
  3. Two-step TB test may detect latent disease.(tuberculosis): An article from: Internal Medicine News by Robert Finn, 2004-08-01
  4. Bovine Tuberculosis Contr O/P by Myers, 1969-12-01
  5. Concurrence of granular cell tumor and Mycobacterium tuberculosis.(Case Report): An article from: Southern Medical Journal by Youngsook Yoon, Karen Curry, 2005-10-01
  6. Central nervous system tuberculosis and paradoxical response.: An article from: Southern Medical Journal by Mohammad Wasay, 2006-04-01
  7. Essentials of Tuberculosis in Children by Seth, 2006
  8. CORIXA GETS 2.3 MILLION GRANT FOR TUBERCULOSIS VACCINE.: An article from: Biotech Business
  9. Bovine tuberculosis by E. F Brush, 1888
  10. Tuberculosis: A Clinical Handbook
  11. Tuberculosis: Part I, Tuberculosis Morbidity and Mortality and Its Control. Part II, Tuberculous Infection (Vital and Health Statistics Monographs, American Public Health Association) by Anthony M. Lowell, Lydia B. Edwards, et all 1969-01-01
  12. Kayne, Pagel, and O'Shaughnessy's Pulmonary tuberculosis: Pathology, diagnosis, management and prevention ; revised and partly rewritten by Walter Pagel ... [et al.] (Oxford medical publications) by George Gregory Kayne, 1948
  13. Tuberculosis Control: A Manual on Methods and Procedures for Integrated Programs (Scientific Publication, 498)
  14. Kaposi sarcoma secondary to pulmonary tuberculosis: a rare case.(Case Report): An article from: Southern Medical Journal by Zuhal Mujgan Guler, Asiye Kanbay, et all 2005-09-01

81. Welcome To The Charles P. Felton National TB Center
The goal is to meet the challenge of TB in Harlem by providing innovative prevention, treatment, and training programs to members community and healthcare providers serving the community.
http://www.harlemtbcenter.org
T he Charles P. Felton National Tuberculosis Center at Harlem Hospital is one of three "model centers" funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a partnership of Harlem Hospital, Columbia University, Health & Hospitals Corporation, and New York City Department of Health. As a "model center," our mandate is to contribute to the elimination of tuberculosis (TB) as a public health problem by creating and distributing training and education products for the appropriate diagnosis and treatment of TB and latent TB infection, and by developing and testing innovative programs. T he unique characteristics of the Harlem community have compelled the Center to focus on initiatives which are tailored to fit its needs, such as: providing comprehensive social support to reduce psycho-social barriers to treatment completion; developing and implementing new models of care that are sensitive to both patient and community needs; and educating and training persons who provide care to this kind of community. These programs have been conducive to the declining TB rates in Harlem and New York City, and have contributed to TB control efforts elsewhere.
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82. The American Journal Of The Medical Sciences - Home
AEGiSNMAIN TB (tuberculosis)New Mexico AIDS Info Net click here to return to new mexico aids info net main menu TB (tuberculosis) New Mexico AIDS InfoNet - Revised January 14, 2002
http://www.amjmedsci.com/
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    Guests - simply create a new account via the Register button on the top menu bar. Once you have established an account you will be able to purchase articles via our pay-per-view service and sign up for additional online services.
  • 83. OSH Answers: Tuberculosis
    What are the signs and symptoms of tuberculosis? How is tuberculosis transmitted?Should tuberculosis be an occupational concern? tuberculosis.
    http://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/diseases/tubercul.html
    Canadian Centre for Occupational
    Health and Safety
    Contact Us
    Help Canada Site Web Info Service ... Shop@CCOHS
    Tuberculosis What is tuberculosis? What are the signs and symptoms of tuberculosis? How is tuberculosis transmitted? How is tuberculosis recognized? ... Should tuberculosis be an occupational concern? OSH Answers Feedback Printer Friendly Layout Inquiries Service
    The Inquiries Service at CCOHS answers questions on the health or safety concerns people have about the work they do. More on Inquiries Service
    Printer Friendly Layout Biological Hazards Tuberculosis
    What is tuberculosis?
    Tuberculosis is an infectious disease caused by a germ called Mycobacterium tuberculosis . The germ usually causes an infection in the lungs, but sometimes it can affect other parts of the body. What are the signs and symptoms of tuberculosis? The signs or symptoms of tuberculosis are common to many other diseases. They are:
    • loss of weight loss of energy poor appetite fever and wet cough
    How is tuberculosis transmitted? Tuberculosis is transmitted through the air from exposure to germs in the saliva of infected persons and sputum coughed up from their lungs. When an infected person coughs or sneezes, tiny droplets which contain the germs are released and can be inhaled by employees or anyone in the area. The germs inhaled through the nose and mouth reach the windpipe (trachea) and the dividing air tubes (bronchi) that lead to the lungs. The germs can spread from the initial location in the lungs to other parts of the body through the bloodstream. Within weeks from infection, the immune system which is the infection control mechanism of the human body, reacts to the germs and usually prevents them from multiplying and spreading. Not everyone infected develops the disease. In fact, about 90% of infected persons remain infected for life without having any symptoms.

    84. Ron's Official Waverly Hills Website
    Pages with photographs, history, and current status of the Waverly Hills tuberculosis sanatorium near Louisville, Kentucky.
    http://www.waverlyhillstbsanatorium.com/
    waverlyhillstbsanatorium.com;http://z28ron.tripod.com/waverlyhills2004; waverlyhillstbsanatorium.com;http://z28ron.tripod.com/waverlyhills2004;

    85. UTE - Unitat De Tuberculosi Experimental
    Equipo multidisciplinar que investiga la tuberculosis y sus modelos experimentales. Informaci³n de la enfermedad y del bacilo causal.
    http://ute.galenicom.com/Castellano/UTEINDEX2.htm
    Esta página usa marcos, pero su explorador no los admite.

    86. Communicable Disease Fact Sheet
    tuberculosis. Version en español. (TB). tuberculosis (TB) Further Information Wadsworth Center for Laboratories and Research. What is tuberculosis?
    http://www.health.state.ny.us/nysdoh/communicable_diseases/en/tb.htm
    Return to
    Communicable Disease
    Tuberculosis
    (TB) Tuberculosis (TB) Further Information Wadsworth Center for Laboratories and Research What is tuberculosis? Tuberculosis is a bacterial disease usually affecting the lungs (pulmonary TB). Other parts of the body can also be affected, for example lymph nodes, kidneys, bones, joints, etc., (extrapulmonary TB). Approximately 1800 cases are reported each year in NYS. Who gets tuberculosis? Tuberculosis can affect anyone of any age. People with weakened immune systems are at increased risk. How is tuberculosis spread? Tuberculosis is spread through the air when a person with untreated pulmonary TB coughs or sneezes. Prolonged exposure to a person with untreated TB usually is necessary for infection to occur. What is the difference between latent tuberculosis infection and tuberculosis disease? Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) means the person has the TB germ in their body (usually lungs), but has yet to develop obvious systoms. In latent TB, the person has a significant reaction to the Mantoux skin test with no symptoms of tuberculosis, and no TB organisms found in the sputum. Tuberculosis disease indicates the person has symptoms, a significant reaction to a Mantoux skin test and organisms found in the sputum. In order to spread the TB germs, a person must have TB disease. Having latent TB infection is not enough to spread the germ. Tuberculosis may last for a lifetime as an infection, never developing into disease.

    87. CNN.com - CDC: Tuberculosis Cases Hit All-time Low - Mar. 21, 2003
    CNN
    http://cnn.com/2003/HEALTH/conditions/03/21/cdc.tuberculosis.ap/index.html
    The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Special Reports SERVICES Video E-Mail Services CNNtoGO SEARCH Web CNN.com
    CDC: Tuberculosis cases hit all-time low
    Story Tools ATLANTA, Georgia (AP) The number of tuberculosis cases in the United States last year dropped by nearly 6 percent to an all-time low, federal officials said Thursday. HEALTH LIBRARY Health Library Men's Health Women's Health Care for the whole family The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said 15,078 cases of TB were reported last year, a 5.7 percent drop from 15,989 in 2001. The decline was attributed to better public health prevention services. The CDC also said the national TB rate 5.2 cases per 100,000 people is the lowest recorded in the United States since reporting began in 1953. However, federal health officials said, TB rates among blacks are nearly eight times higher than for whites and are twice that of Hispanics. "Closing the gap in tuberculosis rates is essential if tuberculosis is to be eliminated in our country," said Dr. Kenneth Castro, director of the division of tuberculosis elimination at the CDC.
    Associated Press

    Story Tools
    Click Here to try 4 Free Trial Issues of Time!

    88. Virtual Hospital: University Of Iowa Family Practice Handbook, Fourth Edition: I
    10. Infectious Disease tuberculosis. Philip See related Provider Topics Infections, Lungs and Breathing or tuberculosis. See related
    http://www.vh.org/adult/provider/familymedicine/FPHandbook/Chapter10/03-10.html
    For Providers University of Iowa Family Practice Handbook, Fourth Edition, Chapter 10
    Infectious Disease: Tuberculosis
    Philip M. Polgreen, MD
    Department of Internal Medicine
    University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

    Peer Review Status: Externally Peer Reviewed by Mosby
  • TB Screening . Recommended for:
  • Close contacts of those with known or suspected TB. Persons infected with HIV IV drug users or users of other illicit drugs. Chronically ill patients with conditions or diseases that increase the risk of progressing from latent to active TB: DM, high-dose steroids, immunosuppressive therapy, chronic renal failure, lymphoma, leukemia, other cancer, weight loss to more than 10% below ideal weight, silicosis, gastrectomy, and jejunoileal bypass. Foreign-born persons and those arriving within the last 5 years from countries that have had a high incidence of TB. Residents and employees of high-risk institutions : correctional facilities, nursing homes, mental institutions, and homeless shelters. Health care workers serving high-risk patients.
  • 89. Tuberculosis - Lungs: Pulmonary And Respiratory Health And Medical Information P
    What is tuberculosis? tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease caused by bacteria whose scientific name is Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
    http://www.medicinenet.com/Tuberculosis/article.htm
    document.write(''); MedicineNet Home Lungs Home > Tuberculosis Advanced Search
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    Tuberculosis
    (TB)
    What is tuberculosis?
    Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease caused by bacteria whose scientific name is Mycobacterium tuberculosis. TB most commonly affects the lungs but also can involve most any organ of the body. Many years ago, this disease used to be called "Consumption" because without effective treatment, these patients often would waste away. Today, of course, tuberculosis usually can be treated successfully with antibiotics. How does a person get TB?
    A person can become infected with tuberculosis bacteria when he or she inhales minute particles of infected sputum from the air. The bacteria get into the air when someone who has a tuberculosis lung infection coughs, sneezes, shouts, or spits (which is common in some cultures). People who are nearby can then possibly breathe the bacteria into their lungs. You don't get TB by just touching the clothes or shaking the hands of someone who is infected. Tuberculosis is spread (transmitted) primarily from person to person during close contact by breathing infected air. There is a form of tuberculosis, however, that is transmitted by drinking unpasteurized milk. Related bacteria, called Mycobacterium bovis, cause this form of TB. It previously was a major cause of TB in children, but rarely causes TB now since most milk is pasteurized (a heating process that kills the bacteria).

    90. Courier-Journal.com: Places In Time
    CourierJournal article about the history of Waverly Hills tuberculosis Sanatorium in Louisville, Kentucky, and its neighborhood.
    http://www.courier-journal.com/reweb/community/placetime/southend-waverly.html
    Home News Sports Business ... Places in Time
    Mail this page Waverly
    TUBERCULOSIS HOSPITAL WAS HEART OF AN ISOLATED COMMUNITY, INSPIRING LOYALTY IN PATIENTS, STAFF By Beverly Bartlett
    The Courier-Journal n the first half of this century, the Waverly Hills Tuberculosis Sanatorium gave a lot to the neighborhood below it. Cinders from its boiler room paved a portion of East Pages Lane beginning at Dixie Highway. And almost every family near the intersection found some employment there. The hospital was built on a mountain ridge off Dixie Highway in 1911 through the efforts of several prominent Louisvillians who were concerned about the spread and treatment of tuberculosis. Over the years, the neighborhood around it acquired the name. But the hospital no longer operates there, and these days the area is known as Waverly Hills to only a very few. Most of the hospital buildings that still stand are vacant and nearly hidden from the road below. However, a few of the houses once used by doctors are now private residences on East Pages Lane. The entrances to the hospital have been closed off, but residents say teen-agers walk up there anyway. Charles Severs, a Valley Station physician who now owns the main hospital building, has reported extensive vandalism.

    91. Tuberculosis-Información Básica
    Translate this page tuberculosis. Descripción, Distribución. Agente Infeccioso, Modos de transmisión. Reservorio, Periodo de Incubación. Periodo de transmisibilidad,
    http://www.netsalud.sa.cr/ms/estadist/enferme/tuberc.htm
    TUBERCULOSIS
    Descripción Distribución Agente Infeccioso Modos de transmisión ... Métodos de control Incidencia en Costa Rica EN REVISION Vigilancia Epidemiológica
    MINISTERIO DE SALUD - COSTA RICA 2000 (c)
    *Bienestar y salud igual para todos*

    92. CNN.com - Health - Vaccine May Work Against Tuberculosis - November 30, 2000
    CNN
    http://cnn.com/2000/HEALTH/11/30/tuberculosis.vaccine.reut/index.html
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    Davos protesters confront police MORE ... MORE MARKETS 4:30pm ET, 4/16 DJIA NAS SPORTS Jordan says farewell for the third time ... LOCAL EDITIONS: CNN.com Europe change default edition MULTIMEDIA: video video archive audio multimedia showcase ... more services E-MAIL: Subscribe to one of our news e-mail lists Enter your address: DISCUSSION: chat feedback CNN WEB SITES: CNNfyi.com CNN.com Europe AsiaNow Spanish ... Korean Headlines TIME INC. SITES: Go To ... Time.com People Money Fortune EW CNN NETWORKS: CNN anchors transcripts Turner distribution SITE INFO: help contents search ad info ... jobs WEB SERVICES:
    Vaccine may work against tuberculosis
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) A new and improved vaccine against tuberculosis might be ready for testing in people as early as next year, researchers said Wednesday. They said their vaccine, based on a formulation nearly a century old, was dramatically better and protected all tested guinea pigs against disease.

    93. Bacteriology 330 Lecture Topics: Tuberculosis
    Bacteriology at UWMadison Bacteriology 330 Home Page. Bacteriology 330 Lecture Topics tuberculosis. tuberculosis DEATHS CAPTAIN.
    http://www.bact.wisc.edu/Bact330/lecturetb
    Bacteriology at UW-Madison
    Bacteriology 330 Home Page
    Bacteriology 330 Lecture Topics: Tuberculosis
    by Dr. Jerome Harms -University of Wisconsin - Department of Animal Health and Biomedical Sciences
    TUBERCULOSIS: DEATHS CAPTAIN
    To TUBERCULOSIS COMPLEX: THE EVIL EMPIRE
    To TB WARS: MAN'S ANCIENT STRUGGLE

    To TB STRIKES BACK: THE DEADLY RESURGENCE

    To RETURN OF THE BASICS: HUMANITYS COUNTER-OFFENSIVE
    INTRODUCTION: TUBERCULOSIS TODAY
    In 1984, the Public Health Service reported that the number of tuberculosis cases reported annually in 1953 had declined by 74 percent. It was widely believed that modern medicine had all but eradicated this potentially fatal disease. The wake-up call alerting the public to the resurgence of tuberculosis came between 1985 and 1993, when the number of cases reported in the United States began to increase steadily and dramatically. Today TB is back, and if proper measures are not taken to educate people about this preventable disease, infection rates will continue to rise at an alarming rate.
  • Someone is infected with tuberculosis every second.
  • 94. Tuberculosis
    Bacteriology at UWMadison Bacteriology 330 Home Page. tuberculosis. tuberculosis Infection vs Disease. TB Infection, TB disease in lungs. M.TB. present, M.TB.
    http://www.bact.wisc.edu/Bact330/lecturetuberculosis
    Bacteriology at UW-Madison
    Bacteriology 330 Home Page
    Tuberculosis
    Tuberculosis is the leading cause of death in the world from a single infectious disease, although surprisingly little is known of the mechanisms of its pathogenesis and protection from it. After a century of decline in the United States, tuberculosis is increasing, and multible drug-resistant strains have emerged. This increase in cases is attributable to changes in the social structure in cities, the HIV epidemic, and a failure in some cities to improve public treatment programs. Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the etiologic agent of tuberculosis (TB) in humans. Humans are the only reservoir for the bacterium. Mycobacterium bovis is the etiologic agent of TB in cows and rarely in humans. Both cows and humans can serve as reservoirs. Humans can also be infected by the consumption of unpasteurized milk. This route of transmission can lead to the development of extrapulmonary TB, exemplified in history by bone infections that led to hunched backs. Other human pathogens belonging to the Mycobacterium genus include Mycobacterium avium which causes a TB-like disease especially prevalent in AIDS patients, and

    95. U.S. Tuberculosis Cases Fall To All-time Low
    CNN
    http://cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/conditions/06/12/tuberculosis.ap/index.html

    96. HPA - Infections | Topics A-Z | Tuberculosis (TB)
    To enlarge text select view then text size on your browser. This site uses Adobe Acrobat Download Adobe Acrobat Download here. tuberculosis.
    http://www.hpa.org.uk/infections/topics_az/tb/menu.htm
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    Tuberculosis
    Tuberculosis (TB) causes more deaths worldwide than any other single infectious disease and was declared a 'global emergency' by the World Health Organization in 1993. TB is usually curable with a combination of specific antibiotics, but treatment must be continued for at least six months.
    Updates World TB Day 2004 HPA Press Statement (World TB Day) 2001 Annual Report 2002 Preliminary Annual Report ... News and Events, Newsletter, Courses

    97. Bmj.com Collected Resources : Tuberculosis
    tuberculosis. Citations 110 of 46 total displayed. Most recent content (3 Apr 2004) News Medical charity criticises shortcomings
    http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/collection/Tuberculosis

    Home
    Help Search/Archive Feedback Collected Resources
    Tuberculosis
    Citations 1-10 of 46 total displayed. Most recent content (3 Apr 2004):
    News
    Medical charity criticises shortcomings of DOTS in management of tuberculosis
    Ganapati Mudur
    BMJ 2004;328:784 , doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7443.784-a [Full text] [PDF]
    Clinical review
    Burden of infectious diseases in South Asia
    Anita K M Zaidi, Shally Awasthi, and H Janaka deSilva
    BMJ 2004;328:811-815 , doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7443.811 [Full text] [PDF]
    Past content (since Apr 1999):
    News roundup
    Drug resistant tuberculosis soars in eastern Europe
    Chibuzo Odigwe
    BMJ 2004;328:663 , doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7441.663 [Abridged text] [Abridged PDF] [Full text]
    News
    Australia's contribution to global health fund provokes dismay
    Bob Burton
    BMJ 2004;328:486 , doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7438.486 [Full text] [PDF]
    News extra
    Hopes that Novartis deal on tuberculosis will spur donations for HIV and malaria
    Fiona Fleck BMJ 2004;328:70 , doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7431.70-a [Full text]
    News extra Seven international companies join global fund
    Fiona Fleck BMJ 2003;327:1368 , doi:10.1136/bmj.327.7428.1368-c

    98. CNN.com - Scientists Discover Tuberculosis Strategy For Hiding In Body - August
    CNN
    http://www.cnn.com/2000/HEALTH/08/17/tuberculosis.trick.ap/index.html
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    Scientists discover tuberculosis strategy for hiding in body
    (AP) Scientists have identified a key trick that tuberculosis bacteria use to lie low in the body for years before going on the attack a discovery that could open a whole new approach to fighting a disease that kills more than 2 million people around the world each year. "In terms of public health, there is a long way to go. This is an important step in the right direction," said Dr. William Bishai, professor of international health and medicine at Johns Hopkins University.

    99. Tuberculosis
    De qué estamos hablando? La tuberculosis (TB) es la infección de mayor prevalencia en el mundo.
    http://www.fisterra.com/guias2/tuberculosis.htm
    Atención Primaria en la Red Principal Guías Clínicas Índice alfabético Índice especialidades Elaborada con opinión de expertos y revisión posterior por colegas Parcialmente financiado con una ayuda del Servicio Galego de Saude a la Sociedad Gallega de Medicina Interna ( sin número de identificación). Conflicto de intereses: Ninguno declarado [A ][B ][C Grado de Recomendación Tuberculosis Guías Clínicas 2003; 3 (25) Autores García Pais MJ *, Rigueiro Veloso MT*, Casariego Vales E*, Corredoira Sánchez JC*, Varela Otero J*, García Rodríguez JF** * Servicio de Medicina Interna. Complejo Hospitalario Xeral- Calde, Lugo. España
    ** Servicio de Medicina Interna.. Hospital Arquitecto Marcide-Profesor Novoa Santos, Ferrol. España Documento en PDF ¿Problemas con PDF? Cuestionario de autoevaluación Índice de resúmenes de las revisiones COCHRANE
    Guías Clínicas sobre Tuberculosis
    en MEDLINE
    Colección de artículos sobre Tuberculosis
    en BMJ American Thoracic Society, CDC, and Infectious Diseases Society of America Treatment of Tuberculosis

    100. DANTB Home
    Information about the organization, initiatives, publications, a resource directory as well as the details about the disease itself.
    http://www.dantb.org
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