Tuberculosis (TB) is a bacterial illness caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium Tuberculosis and is primarily an illness of the respiratory system. The bacteria are spread by respiratory droplets inhaled from someone with the condition who coughed or sneezed. Each year about 1.6 million people die from this curable disease. Certain areas have a high rate of people infected with tuberculosis so it is important to tell a physician/doctor you're seeing about your cough if you recently traveled.
Because tuberculosis mainly affects the lungs, the main symptoms include persistent cough, sometimes producing blood, chest pain, shortness, of breath, fever and sweating (sometimes night sweats), poor appetite and weight loss. Do not panic it is treatable if caught early enough. A chest x-ray and sputum test can be helpful tools for diagnosing the tuberculosis.
Tuberculosis is a disease that attacks the lungs.
Tuberculosis usually attacks your lungs. Signs and symptoms of TB of the lungs include:
Tuberculosis can also affect other parts of your body, including your kidneys, spine or brain. When TB occurs outside your lungs, signs and symptoms vary according to the organs involved. For example, tuberculosis of the spine may give you Back pain, and tuberculosis in your kidneys might cause blood in your urine.
Tuberculin is a purified preparation of proteinoid antigens derived from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causitive agent of TB. It is used to detect whether a person has been exposed to tuberculosis. a tiny quantity of the antigen is injected just under the skin, usually on the forearm. Inflammation at the site within 48-72 hours indicates that the person has had exposure, either by being infected or by vaccination. The tuberculin itself contains no infectious bacteria and cannot itself cause sensitization or TB disease.
tuberculosis is a lung disease that starts off as a spot on your lung and makes you very skinny and not able to eat.
It can be measured using tuberculin syringe 1 ml.
what would 20 units be equal to in a 1 cc tuberculin
Two different tuberculin preparations are available, Old Tuberculin (OT) and Purified Protein Derivative (PPD). The latter is the preferred testing substance.
No, a tuberculin syringe is intended for use in intradermal injections and the flu shot is given intramuscularly. The needle on a tuberculin syringe is not the right size.
G. A. C. Gough has written: 'The purification of tuberculin' -- subject(s): Tuberculin
NO
0.1mL
Two different tuberculin preparations are available, Old Tuberculin (OT) and Purified Protein Derivative (PPD). The latter is the preferred testing substance.
Tuberculin Precipitation
To read a tuberculin syringe you simply have to look at the calibrations on the syringe. Make sure that your eye is level to avoid taking a wrong reading as a result of parallax.
Mantoux test
1/100