Smoking and tuberculosis: a chance or causal association?
Autor: | G H Bothamley |
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Rok vydání: | 2005 |
Předmět: |
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
education.field_of_study Immunity Cellular Tuberculosis business.industry Transmission (medicine) Tuberculin Test Population Smoking Tuberculin Disease medicine.disease Editorial Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) Delayed hypersensitivity Environmental health Immunology medicine Humans Risk factor education business Tuberculosis Pulmonary |
Zdroj: | Thorax. 60(7) |
ISSN: | 0040-6376 |
Popis: | Possible explanations for the association between smoking and tuberculosis In 1956 Doll and Hill1 wrote that “ the relationship between smoking and mortality from pulmonary tuberculosis is distinct, but with a disease so influenced by social factors more precise data are needed to justify a direct cause and effect hypothesis ”. The essential risk factors for human tuberculosis are (1) the tubercle bacillus, (2) a susceptible host, and (3) an environment which allows the tubercle bacilli to survive transit from one host to the next. All other risk factors are subsumed under these headings. If smoking is a risk factor for tuberculosis, then it must act by increasing the susceptibility of the human host or the probability of transmission by encouraging infectious individuals to cough (this requires smoking to be a social as much as an individual pursuit). If the association between smoking and tuberculosis is more apparent than real, then smoking may be a pointer to other risk factors. These include social class—itself a marker for overcrowding, poor ventilation and rooms with no natural light as well as poor nutrition—general ill health and, increasingly, HIV infection with prostitution and intravenous drug use. Tuberculous infection and tuberculosis as a disease are entirely different states. The former is commonly characterised by tuberculin reactivity (despite the known problem of exposure to non-tuberculous mycobacteria and the cross reactivity of the mixture of antigens2). Approximately one third of the world’s population may be infected with the tubercle bacillus, but only eight million (0.4%) develop tuberculosis each year. Studies conflict as to whether smoking affects delayed hypersensitivity to tuberculin. Kuemmerer and Comstock3 noted that … |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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