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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Tuberculosis - the disease
- Pulmonary tuberculosis
- The tubercle bacillus
- Natural history of M.tb. - population level
- Natural history of M.tb. - individual level
- Initial exposure to M.tb.
- Early events of infection development
- Host response in infection development
- Granuloma formation (1)
- Granuloma formation (2)
- Infection outcome
- Latent TB infection, poorly understood
- LTBI
- Active TB
- The Dannenberg granuloma development model (1)
- The Dannenberg granuloma development model (2)
- New insights into active TB
- Transcriptional signatures associated with infection
- Type I IFN inhibits activation of macrophages
- TB and HIV
- Acknowledgements
Topics Covered
- TB disease
- The tubercle bacillus
- The natural history of TB
- M.tb. initial infection
- Granuloma formation
- Latent TB
- Active TB
- TB and HIV
- Animal models of TB pathogenesis
Links
Series:
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Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Bishai, W.R. (2013, February 28). The pathogenesis of tuberculosis [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 3, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/ENOY4493.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Bishai hold patents related to recombinant BCG strains with potential use as TB vaccines.
A selection of talks on Respiratory Diseases
Transcript
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0:00
Hello. My name is William Bishai.
I'm from the Kwazulu Natal Research Institute for TB and HIV in Johns Hopkins.
This presentation is on the pathogenesis of tuberculosis.
0:12
Tuberculosis is a human infection caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
It can also be caused by two other closely related species that are members of the M.tb.
complex, M. bovis, and M. africanum.
While TB generally affects the lungs.
It can also lead to extrapulmonary TB in any part of the human body.
As in panel A, extensive pulmonary tuberculosis effects,
that's left lung, particularly in the left upper lobe
with many cavities and granulomatous inflammation,
but also cavities in the left lower lobe; B,
is cerebral tuberculosis with those grayish lesions of the brainstem and lower cerebrum;
C, splenic tuberculosis with multiple granulomas;
D, cardiac tuberculosis; E,
gastrointestinal TB with two large lesions; F,
renal tuberculosis; G TB of lymph nodes,
a very common occurrence; H, eye tuberculosis,
and in I and J,
extensive TB lesions of the skin.
1:22
In this talk, we'll focus on pulmonary tuberculosis and how the microbe, M.tb.
causes infection from a pathogenesis point of view.
Just to show the magnitude of the virulence of this pathogen,
the bottom-left panel shows a large cavity in a human lung.
On the right is a chest x-ray showing
a tennis ball-sized pulmonary cavity in
the right lower lobe of another individual affected by pulmonary tuberculosis.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis or the tubercle bacillus is a rod-shaped,