From Magic Mountain to Table Mountain
Autor: | Diacon Ah, von Groote-Bidlingmaier F, Donald Pr |
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Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Tuberculosis medicine.medical_treatment Antitubercular Agents History 21st Century chemistry.chemical_compound Tuberculosis Multidrug-Resistant medicine Humans Intensive care medicine Tuberculosis Pulmonary Ethambutol business.industry Isoniazid General Medicine History 20th Century Pyrazinamide medicine.disease Surgery Regimen chemistry Tuberculosis management Drug Therapy Combination Bedaquiline business Rifampicin medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Swiss Medical Weekly. |
ISSN: | 1424-3997 1424-7860 |
DOI: | 10.4414/smw.2012.13665 |
Popis: | Summary Prior to the introduction of chemotherapy, tuberculosis management relied upon aerotherapy, heliotherapy and good nutrition. This “treatment”, exemplified by the regimen applied in Swiss and other European mountain resorts, is described by Thomas Mann in the book “The Magic Mountain”. Tuberculosis chemotherapy began in 1944 with the introduction of streptomycin and para-amino-salicylic acid, later augmented by isoniazid. Early experience taught physicians that treatment must be given with multiple drugs to prevent emergence of resistance and that prolonged treatment adherence for 18‐24 months was needed for a permanent cure of tuberculosis. Between 1970 and 1980 rifampicin was introduced and with pyrazinamide it made “short-course” treatment possible. For 30 years, a 6-month directly observed treatment short-course (DOTS) based on the three compounds isoniazid, rifampicin and pyrazinamide was the foundation of tuberculosis control strategies world-wide, and in recent years this was supplemented with ethambutol in view of increasing rates of isoniazid resistance. However, even 6 months of treatment is too long to easily ensure the compliance necessary to permanently cure tuberculosis. The recent spread of the HIV/ AIDS epidemic has placed tuberculosis programmes under severe pressure and is accompanied by an increase in drug-resistance making tuberculosis virtually untreatable in some instances. In 2004 the first of a new generation of anti-tuberculosis drugs entered clinical evaluation. A series of clinical trials, often conducted at sites in Cape Town, South Africa, has shown them to be efficacious and hold promise of being able to shorten tuberculosis treatment and treat drug-resistant tuberculosis. Development and assessment of these drugs is ongoing but there is renewed hope that these new drugs and regimens will assist in finally conquering tuberculosis, preventing a return to Magic Mountain where sunshine and fresh air was all that could be offered to patients. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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