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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. Ending Neglect: The Elimination of Tuberculosis in the United States by Committee on the Elimination of Tuberculosis in the United States, Division of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, et all 2000-09-15
  3. Contagion and Confinement: Controlling Tuberculosis along the Skid Road by Professor Barron H. Lerner PhD, 1998-11-16
  4. La Ciudad Impura: Salud, Tuberculosis y Cultura En Buenos Aires, 1870-1950 (Spanish Edition) by Diego Armus, 2007-01
  5. Must We All Die?: Alaska's Enduring Struggle with Tuberculosis by Robert Fortuine, 2005-03-01
  6. From Chaos to Coercion: Detention and the Control of Tuberculosis by Richard J. Coker, 2000-02-19
  7. Pioneers in Medicine and Their Impact on Tuberculosis by Thomas M. Daniel, 2001-01-21
  8. Tuberculosis and the Politics of Exclusion: A History of Public Health and Migration to Los Angeles (Critical Issues in Health and Medicine) by EmilyK. Abel, 2007-10-08
  9. Implementing the WHO Stop TB Strategy: A Handbook for National Tuberculosis Control Programmes by A. Piot, P. Chaulet, 2009-04
  10. The Tuberculosis Movement: A Public Health Campaign in the Progressive Era (Contributions in Medical Studies) by Michael E. Teller, 1988-04-21
  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. De Sterfte Aan Tuberculosis Pulmonum In Nederland: 1875-1895 (1897) (Mandarin Chinese Edition) by Berendinus Johannes Femia Bavinck, 2010-02-23

81. Christian Friends Of Korea
Provides food, medicine, medical equipment and other assistance to hospitals and tuberculosis clinics in North Korea. Includes information about the organization, its projects, how to donate, photos and newsletters (some in Korean)
http://www.cfk.org/
Christian Friends of Korea
PO Box 936
Black Mountain, NC 28711

82. CNN.com - Tuberculosis Makes Sharp Comeback In Japan - November 26, 2000
CNN
http://cnn.com/2000/ASIANOW/south/11/26/japan.tb.comeback.ap/index.html
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Tuberculosis makes sharp comeback in Japan
November 27, 2000

83. An History Of The Fight Against Tuberculosis In Canada.
Dr. David A. Stewart was the eldest son of Francis Beattie Stewart and Elizabeth Farquharson Stewart who left Aberdeenshire in the UK, and settled at Fletcher, Ontario, until 1891 when they moved to Morden, Manitoba.
http://www.lung.ca/tb/tbhistory/people/stewart.html
People Profiles
Dr. David Alexander Stewart (1874-1937)
Dr. David A. Stewart was the eldest son of Francis Beattie Stewart and Elizabeth Farquharson Stewart who left Aberdeenshire in the UK, and settled at Fletcher, Ontario, until 1891 when they moved to Morden, Manitoba. After graduation from Arts, and two preliminary years in Theology at Manitoba College, the young Stewart spent his summer at the mission in Frank, Alberta. Here, he met and befriended Dr. George Malcolmson, who had recently opened a small hospital beside his home. As a result of his summer with Dr. Malcolmson, Stewart opted for a change in vocation.
People - Archibald - Dalton - Cook - Fagan ... - Wodehouse
Returning again to Manitoba in the Fall, Stewart resumed study not in Theology, but in Medicine, and emerged four years later, Dr. D.A. Stewart. To support his medical studies, Stewart became a reporter for the Winnipeg Free Press, and then followed with a residency at Winnipeg General Hospital. After spending some time working in various hospitals in New York City, attending the World TB Congress in Washington in 1908, and completing an assistantship in a Connecticut sanatorium, Dr. Stewart returned once again to Manitoba. At this time, he accepted a position with the Sanatorium Board, who wished to open a tuberculosis sanatorium in Manitoba. Dr. Stewart's dedication to his cause, applied through travel and lectures for raising funds, made him a target for the very disease he was trying to fight. For a short time, Dr. Stewart became a patient himself, at the Trudeau Sanatorium at Saranac Lake, New York

84. Nature Genome Gateway - Papers - Mycobacterium Tuberculosis
The complete genome sequence of the tuberculosis bacillus, Mycobacterium Deciphering the biology of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from the complete genome
http://www.nature.com/genomics/papers/m_tuberculosis.html

genome gateway
papers Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
The complete genome sequence of the tuberculosis bacillus, Mycobacterium tuberculosis , was presented in Nature in June 1998. This slow-growing pathogen is among the most recalcitrant in terms of clinical treatment, so there was particular interest in what the sequence revealed about its biology. The remarkably large proportion of its coding capacity devoted to producing enzymes involved in lipogenesis and lipolysis was immediately evident. CNRI/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY article
Deciphering the biology of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from the complete genome sequence
Nature 537-544 (11 June 1998)
Summary
Full Text PDF news and views
Blueprint for the white plague
DOUGLAS B. YOUNG
With annual deaths from Mycobacterium tuberculosis estimated at around three million, this single pathogen claims more human lives than any other. What we now learn from the sequence of its genome should help in devising new strategies to fight it.
Nature 515-516 (11 June 1998)
Full Text
PDF

85. Bacteriology 330 Lecture Topics: Tuberculosis
The wakeup call alerting the public to the resurgence of tuberculosis One third of the world s population is infected tuberculosis complex bacteria.
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.
  • 86. Traverse City Record-Eagle - News Story -- Www.record-eagle.com
    Mike Norton reports in the Traverse City RecordEagle on the history and current status of the former tuberculosis sanatorium in Gaylord, Michigan.
    http://www.record-eagle.com/2001/sep/30norton.htm

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    Gaylord's Alpine Center a sight to behold
    By MIKE NORTON Record-Eagle staff writer GAYLORD - Forget the faux Suisse frills on the Alpenstrasse, and even St. Mary's Cathedral, which looks more like a half-sunken alien Mother Ship than anything else. If you want to see the best architecture Gaylord has to offer, you've got to head north of town to the J. Richard Yuill Alpine Center. Built in 1937 as a 128-bed tuberculosis sanitarium, the Alpine Center was the work of the Depression-era Works Progress Administration. In the 1960s it became the Gaylord State Home, a residential and training institution for people with developmental disabilities. Today it houses a variety of state, county and other public offices. Even though the big four-story main building is in a somewhat severe style, it's full of decorative touches that have long vanished from today's public buildings. But the stars of the complex are the cottages and other outbuildings: built of red brick with white stone sills, copper guttering and steep dark roofs. In a way, they're Gaylord's version of the Traverse City State Hospital complex - except that they're in much better shape.

    87. Tuberculosis
    tuberculosis. Kenneth Todar University of WisconsinMadison Department of Bacteriology. The article has been moved to a new website. Please go to tuberculosis.
    http://www.bact.wisc.edu/Bact330/lecturetuberculosis
    Bacteriology at UW-Madison
    Bacteriology 330 Home Page
    Tuberculosis
    Kenneth Todar University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Bacteriology The article has been moved to a new website. Please go to Tuberculosis

    88. TB Resources: La Prueba De La Tuberculina
    Indicaci³n, t©cnicas, cuidados e interpretaci³n del examen que indica el estado de contagio del paciente por los agentes causantes de tuberculosis.
    http://www.cpmc.columbia.edu/tbcpp/skintess.html
    La Prueba de la Tuberculina
    TB home page Search
    • cansancio constante
    • fiebre
    • sudores nocturnos
    • tos persistente.
  • Personas a las que se lo exigen para un empleo o para la escuela.
  • . Para cada prueba se usan jeringuillas y agujas nuevas, esterilizadas y desechables.
    • NO se cubra el lugar del pinchazo con una curita.
    • NO
    • Puede
    • Esto puede significar que la persona no ha sido infectada con las bacterias que causan la tuberculosis. o
    La tuberculosis es una enfermedad grave causada por bacterias "activas".
  • Si el resultado de su prueba es negativo, no necesita hacerse otra prueba en ese momento.
  • Efectos secundarios posibles Departamento de Salud de la ciudad de Nueva York
  • 89. Tuberculosis, NIAID Fact Sheet
    Many people think tuberculosis (TB) is a disease of the past. Most persons that are infected with M. tuberculosis harbor the bacterium without symptoms
    http://www.niaid.nih.gov/factsheets/tb.htm
    March 2002
    Tuberculosis
    M. tuberculosis . TB is a chronic bacterial infection. It is spread through the air and usually infects the lungs, although other organs are sometimes involved. Most persons that are infected with M. tuberculosis harbor the bacterium without symptoms but many develop active TB disease. Each year, 8 million people worldwide develop active TB and 3 million die. Is TB a problem in the United States? In the United States, TB has re-emerged as a serious public health problem. In 2001, based on provisional data reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of cases has decreased for the ninth straight year to 15,991 cases of active TB (infection with full-blown disease symptoms). This all-time low is due largely to improved public health control measures. In addition to those with active TB, however, an estimated 10 to 15 million people in the United States are infected with M. tuberculosis

    90. Tuberculosis In India:Diagnosis,treatment,control,TB And HIV
    Information on the diagnosis,treatment,control,and prevention of tuberculosis both for the patients as well as doctors.
    http://www.angelfire.com/indie/tbindia/index.html
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    • Disseminate info on TB in India
    • Improve care of TB patients in India
    • Enable doctors and NGO's interested in TB control to interact
    Search this site or the web powered by FreeFind
    Site search Web search Private practitioners: How can private practitioners in India support and encourage governmental efforts on tuberculosis control?What schemes are available
    Read it here

    Slide show on DOTS

    Prevalence figures of TB in India
    Indian Journal of tuberculosis
    Abstracts from July 2005

    Reproduced with kind permission
    Review article
    Original articles

    91. Indian Journal Of Tuberculosis
    Official Organ of the tuberculosis Association of India. medIND journals are hosted by Bibliographic Informatics Division National Informatics Centre
    http://medind.nic.in/ibr/ibrm.shtml
    Official Organ of the Tuberculosis Association of India
    medIND journals are hosted by:
    Bibliographic Informatics Division

    National Informatics Centre

    Department of Information Technology

    A-Block, CGO Complex, Lodhi Road
    New Delhi-110 003, India.
    Visitors since 26th August 2003.

    92. Braunstein Lab - UNC Chapel Hill
    Research focuses on understanding the role protein secretion plays in the pathogenesis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Includes research data, publications, and online tools.
    http://www.unc.edu/~jmcdono/braunsteinlab/
    Genetics and pathogenesis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis - UNC Chapel Hill

    93. Virtual Hospital: University Of Iowa Family Practice Handbook, Fourth Edition: I
    Infectious Disease tuberculosis. Philip M. Polgreen, MD Department of Internal Medicine University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics
    http://www.vh.org/adult/provider/familymedicine/FPHandbook/Chapter10/03-10.html
    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.
  • 94. Identification And Management Of Tuberculosis - May 1, 2000 - American Academy O
    Beginning in 1986, an unexpected resurgence of tuberculosis occurred in the The identification and treatment of persons who have active tuberculosis
    http://www.aafp.org/afp/20000501/2667.html

    Advanced Search

    AAFP Home Page
    Journals Vol. 61/No. 9 (May 1, 2000)
    Identification and Management of Tuberculosis
    ANTHONY F. JERANT, M.D.,
    University of California, Davis, School of Medicine, Davis, California
    MICHELLE BANNON, P.A.-C, M.P.H., and
    STEPHEN RITTENHOUSE, CPT, MC, USA
    Eisenhower Army Medical Center, Fort Gordon, Georgia
    A patient information handout on tuberculosis, written by the authors of this article, is provided on page 2681. See editorial
    on page 2667.
    D uring the early years of the past century, one of every five persons in the United States developed active tuberculosis. The disease was the leading killer of that time, the "captain of all men of death." After 1953, the incidence of tuberculosis declined by almost 75 percent, to a low of 9.3 cases per 100,000 general population in 1985. Beginning in 1986, an unexpected resurgence of tuberculosis occurred in the United States, with the incidence of the disease rising to 10.5 cases per 100,000 population by 1992. Contributing factors included the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic, the immigration of large numbers of persons from countries in which tuberculosis is highly prevalent, the rise of multidrug-resistant mycobacterial organisms and the decline of local tuberculosis control programs.

    95. Women’s Ward Pavilions At Seaview Hospital
    Illustrated preservation page concerning New York City tuberculosis sanitarium constructed in 19091911. The buildings and terra-cotta ornamentation were designed by architect Raymond F. Almirall in the Mission Revival Style.
    http://www.preserve2.org/seaview/wwp.htm
    Preservation Alert:
    by Susan Tunick
    President, Friends of Terra Cotta
    Seaview Hospital-Farm Colony Historic District was designated an official New York City Landmark in 1985. Today, most of the building on this property remain vacant and many are in a severe state of deterioration Demolition by neglect is an unacceptable fate for New York's landmark buildings. The Friends of Terra Cotta is particularly concerned about the exacerbated condition of the ceramic murals and ornament which surround the tops of the Women's Ward Pavilions, buildings #1 - #4. These remarkable works were produced in Delft, Holland by De Porceleyne Fles Numerous tile experts have been interested in seeing these and they will be featured in an upcoming publication by Hans Van Lemmen. After a visit in late February 1998, during which some of these horrendous conditions were documented, it is clear that we must make the city take appropriate action.
    Photos by David Jones Seaview Hospital is situated today on 400 acres surrounded by residential property, a golf course, park and high school.

    96. California Tuberculosis Controllers Association
    Friday, October 7, 2005. San Diego, California. 3851 Rosecrans Street, San Diego, CA. WELCOME to California tuberculosis Controllers Association (CTCA)
    http://www.ctca.org/

    97. 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.

    98. Tuberculosis - Disease Information
    Health information on tuberculosis, a sometimes crippling and deadly disease. It is on the rise and is revisiting both the developed and developing world.
    http://www.mckinley.uiuc.edu/health-info/dis-cond/tb/tb.html
    Go to PDF Version Tuberculosis (TB) Tuberculosis, a sometimes crippling and deadly disease, is on the rise and is revisiting both the developed and developing world. Globally, it is the leading cause of deaths resulting from a single infectious disease. Currently, it kills three million people a year and, if the present trend continues, it is likely to claim more than 30 million lives within the next decade. Recent increases in migration have rapidly mixed infected with uninfected communities and contributed to the spread of the disease. WHAT IS TUBERCULOSIS?
    The second stage of the disease is manifested by destruction or "consumption" of the tissues of the affected organ. When the lung is affected, it results in diminished respiratory capacity, associated with other symptoms; when other organs are affected, even if treated adequately, it may leave permanent, disabling scar tissue. WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS?
    The primary stage of the disease may be symptom-free, or the individual may experience a flu-like illness. In the secondary stage, called active disease, there might be a slight fever, night sweats, weight loss, fatigue and various other symptoms, depending on the part of the body affected. Tuberculosis of the lung is usually associated with a dry cough that eventually leads to a productive cough with blood-stained sputum. There might also be chest pain and shortness of breath. This secondary stage, if affecting the lungs, is the contagious stage - when the bacteria can be spread to others.

    99. Tuberculosis Facts
    Factsheet with cause, symptoms, risk factors, diagnosis, complications, treatment, and prevention.
    http://www.astdhpphe.org/infect/tb.html
    Tuberculosis
    • Tuberculosis (TB) is a serious, re-emerging bacterial illness that usually affects the lungs. TB bacteria are spread from person to person through the air. There are two forms of TB: 1) TB infection, and 2) TB disease (active TB). Most people with TB have infection. People with TB infection have no symptoms and cannot spread TB to others. People with TB disease have symptoms and can spread TB to others. People with TB infection can take medicine to keep them from getting TB disease. People with TB disease can usually be cured with anti-TB drugs. To be effective, the drugs must be taken exactly as prescribed. Some new strains of TB are resistant to many anti-TB drugs. Preventing TB involves: 1) keeping people from becoming infected with TB, 2) keeping people with TB infection from getting TB disease, 3) treating people with TB disease, and 4) implementing precautions in institutional settings to reduce the risk of TB transmission.
    What is tuberculosis (TB)?

    100. Home NTI, Bangalore
    WHO Collaborating Centre for tuberculosis Research Training bull.gif (870 bytes), Performance of National tuberculosis Programme 2002 Summary
    http://ntiindia.kar.nic.in/

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