International Congress on Tuberculosis | |
---|---|
Status | defunct |
Genre | conference |
Begins | 1899 |
Ends | 1912 |
Location(s) | Berlin, London, Paris, Washington, Rome |
The International Congress on Tuberculosis was a series of major congresses held between 1899 and 1912 in which scientists and physicians exchanged information on tuberculosis, a significant cause of death at the time. [lower-alpha 1]
The first International Congress on Tuberculosis (German : Internationalen Tuberkulosekongress) was held at Berlin on the 24–27 May 1899. The congress was opened by Victor II, Duke of Ratibor in the presence of the Empress of Germany. [2] The congress was held in the Chamber of the Reichstag. Various papers were read on the nature of tuberculosis in man and animals, its diagnosis, pathology, and preventative and curative treatment. Most of the speakers were German. There was no general discussion, but the published proceedings were expected to be valuable. [2]
About 180 delegates represented different governments, universities and other public bodies. [2] About 2,000 members attended the sessions, whose purpose was mainly to instruct doctors, officials and the general public. The speakers explained aspects of the subject and the actions that should be taken to prevent the spread of the disease and to treat it when present. [3]
It was known by this time that tuberculosis was caused by a bacillus discovered by Professor Robert Koch of Berlin. [3] Infection was thought to usually be passed by phlegm coughed up by a sick person, dried into dust and then inhaled by a healthy person. [4] It was thought that tuberculosis "is not 'catching', in the popular sense of the word. The disease is not conveyed by the breath, nor even by coughing, except as a rare exception." [5] Milk was known to be an important means of infection, and eating poorly cooked contaminated meat could also cause infection, although rarely. [4]
Means of prevention included free ventilation of houses and wholesome and abundant food. Milk should be boiled, and meat should be carefully inspected, or else the cattle tested for infection. Cures for the disease included abundant food, particularly of a fatty nature, and life in the open air. [6]
The British Congress on Tuberculosis was held in London on 22–27 July 1901. About 2,500 British and foreign delegates were invited, including many eminent pathologists and physicians. The Duke of Cambridge opened the congress on behalf of the king. Great stress was placed on the importance of early treatment, but it was also noted that the patient's dependents must often receive aid. Better sanitary arrangements were also seen as important, and improved housing for the poor. It was agree by all speakers that human sputum was the main vehicle of infection. [7] Professor Brouardel of Paris said, "The danger is in the sputum, which contains thousands of contagious germs. To expectorate on the ground is a disgusting and dangerous habit. Once this habit has quite disappeared, tuberculosis will decrease rapidly." [8]
At this meeting, Robert Koch, who had discovered the tubercle bacillus, announced that it was almost impossible for humans to catch the disease from cattle, and even if they did it would only be a very mild form. [9] He said,
Though the important question whether man is susceptible to bovine tuberculosis at all is not yet absolutely decided, and will not admit of absolute decision to-day or to-morrow, one is nevertheless already at liberty to say that, if such a susceptibility really exists, the infection of human beings is but a very rare occurrence. I should estimate the extent of the infection by the milk and flesh of tuberculous cattle, and the butter made of their milk, as hardly greater than that of hereditary transmission, and I therefore do not deem it advisable to take any measures against it. [8]
John McFadyean of the Royal Veterinary College disputed this view. [10] Frederick Montizambert, Director General of Public Health of the Dominion of Canada, noted that this view was in absolute contradiction of two Royal Commissions whose members included experts such as Sir George Buchanan, Sir John Burdon-Sanderson, Sir Richard Thorne Thorne and Mr. Shirley Murphy. They found that "any person who takes tuberculous matter into the body as food, incurs risk of acquiring tuberculous disease." Montizambert wrote that "the feeling throughout the Congress seemed to be that Dr. Koch's statements were made prematurely, and upon insufficient data, and that, should they prove to be wrong, the amount of harm done may be incalculable." [11] Later Koch modified his views, but the belief that milk with live tubercle bacilli could be drunk without much risk persisted in Britain. [9]
Resolutions adopted at the close of the congress included:
The International Congress on Tuberculosis (French : Congrès international de la tuberculose) was held in Paris on 2–7 October 1905 in the Grand Palais, which allowed all the attendees to collect in one building. [13] The Grand Palais was suitable for holding the large congress due to its great size and many rooms. [14] The French government made a large contribution to the cost. There were 3,500 delegates in all. They represented foreign governments, universities and special associations and committees, and there were also many doctors, surgeons, veterinarians and local administrators. [15] Émile Loubet, President of the French Republic, welcomed the attendees on the first day, and held a reception at the Élysée Palace after the congress closed. The Municipality of Paris gave a reception at the Hotel de Ville, and Le Figaro staged an “at home” where well known artistes performed. The president of the congress, Dr. Hérard, gave a soiree at the Hotel Continental. [13]
The proceedings of the congress were reported in detail in the Paris papers, including Le Figaro, Le Matin and Le Journal . [16] The congress was divided into four sections, which met separately for about six hours daily: Medical Pathology, Surgical Pathology, Preservation and Assistance of Children, Preservation and Assistance of Adults, Social Hygiene. [17] Forty carefully prepared reports were published in advance, and several hundred special papers were prepared by members of the congress. [18]
A museum on tuberculosis was kept open throughout October, with contributions from France, other European countries and the United States. [18] The exhibition was placed in the partially enclosed rooms and large vestibules leading to staircases on either side of the great hall, and in the galleries. The museum occupied the greater part of the right side of the ground floor, and included a careful arrangement of specimens prepared by leading pathologists and bacteriologists, as well as models and photomicrographs. [14] There were models of the grounds of various sanatoriums, with their woods and walks, hills and meadows, and of the internal facilities. There were maps of the distribution of sanitariums for the rich and for the poor, and photographs of patients in sanitariums, illustrating the life and method of treatment. There were also cases that showed various instruments and products associated with detection and treatment, with sales brochures. [19]
The 6th Congress was held in the United States in Washington, D.C., from 28 September to 3 October 1908. [20] Hundreds of the attendees came from Canada, Central and South America, Europe and Japan to obtain the latest information about tuberculosis from biological, economic and sociological perspectives. Outside the sessions they were feted at receptions and taken on tours of hospitals, clinics and sanatoriums. [21] A large number of papers were presented. [20] The congress organizers carefully vetted the papers to avoid the sensationalism and reports of "startling discoveries" given at the London and Paris congresses. The main focus was on the influence of housing conditions in the spread of the disease. [22] Some papers:
The 7th International Congress on Tuberculosis was held in Rome, Italy, on 14–20 April 1912. [26] Robert William Philip of the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh told the congress, [27]
The tuberculization of the race is a grim chapter in human history. The universal distribution of tuberculosis throughout the civilized world is a fact of immense significance. Tuberculosis has accompanied civilization. Tuberculosis is not essential to civilization. Mankind is responsible for tuberculosis. It is a vicious by-product of an incomplete and ill-informed civilization. If the baneful outcome of misguided civilization has been tubereculization, the role of an enlightened civilization must be detuberculization. What an ignorant civilization has introduced an educated civilization can remove. [27]
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: CS1 maint: location (link)The Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) vaccine is a vaccine primarily used against tuberculosis (TB). It is named after its inventors Albert Calmette and Camille Guérin. In countries where tuberculosis or leprosy is common, one dose is recommended in healthy babies as soon after birth as possible. In areas where tuberculosis is not common, only children at high risk are typically immunized, while suspected cases of tuberculosis are individually tested for and treated. Adults who do not have tuberculosis and have not been previously immunized, but are frequently exposed, may be immunized, as well. BCG also has some effectiveness against Buruli ulcer infection and other nontuberculous mycobacterial infections. Additionally, it is sometimes used as part of the treatment of bladder cancer.
Heinrich Hermann Robert Koch was a German physician and microbiologist. As the discoverer of the specific causative agents of deadly infectious diseases including tuberculosis, cholera and anthrax, he is regarded as one of the main founders of modern bacteriology. As such he is popularly nicknamed the father of microbiology, and as the father of medical bacteriology. His discovery of the anthrax bacterium in 1876 is considered as the birth of modern bacteriology. Koch used his discoveries to establish that germs "could cause a specific disease" and directly provided proofs for the germ theory of diseases, therefore creating the scientific basis of public health, saving millions of lives. For his life's work Koch is seen as one of the founders of modern medicine.
Tuberculosis (TB), also known colloquially as the "white death", or historically as consumption, is an infectious disease usually caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) bacteria. Tuberculosis generally affects the lungs, but it can also affect other parts of the body. Most infections show no symptoms, in which case it is known as latent tuberculosis. Around 10% of latent infections progress to active disease that, if left untreated, kill about half of those affected. Typical symptoms of active TB are chronic cough with blood-containing mucus, fever, night sweats, and weight loss. Infection of other organs can cause a wide range of symptoms.
Management of tuberculosis refers to techniques and procedures utilized for treating tuberculosis (TB), or simply a treatment plan for TB.
Lupus vulgaris are painful cutaneous tuberculosis skin lesions with nodular appearance, most often on the face around the nose, eyelids, lips, cheeks, ears and neck. It is the most common Mycobacterium tuberculosis skin infection. The lesions may ultimately develop into disfiguring skin ulcers if left untreated.
Harold Philip Lambert, FRCP was a British medical doctor and professor of medicine, known for his work dealing with infectious diseases and antibiotic therapy. He played a key role in the development of pyrazinamide as a treatment for tuberculosis and also did some of the earliest research into mescaline.
Mycobacterium canettii, a novel pathogenic taxon of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC), was first reported in 1969 by the French microbiologist Georges Canetti, for whom the organism has been named. It formed smooth and shiny colonies, which is highly exceptional for the MTBC. It was described in detail in 1997 on the isolation of a new strain from a 2-year-old Somali patient with lymphadenitis. It did not differ from Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the biochemical tests and in its 16S rRNA sequence. It had shorter generation time than clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis and presented a unique, characteristic phenolic glycolipid and lipo-oligosaccharide. In 1998, Pfyffer described abdominal lymphatic TB in a 56-year-old Swiss man with HIV infection who lived in Kenya. Tuberculosis caused by M. canettii appears to be an emerging disease in the Horn of Africa. A history of a stay to the region should induce the clinician to consider this organism promptly even if the clinical features of TB caused by M. canettii are not specific. The natural reservoir, host range, and mode of transmission of the organism are still unknown.
Niels Thorkild Rovsing was a Danish surgeon remembered for describing Rovsing's sign.
John Bowes MacDougall (1890–1967) was a 20th-century physician and phthisiologist who also was a Scottish international rugby union player who won five caps between 1913 and 1921. He was a world expert in the field of tuberculosis. As an unusual pastime he was interested in rabbit breeding.
Joseph James Kinyoun was an American physician and the founder of the United States' Hygienic Laboratory, the predecessor of the National Institutes of Health.
The Story of John M'Neil is Britain's first public health education film, produced in 1911 by Dr Halliday Sutherland. It is a silent film which dramatises a Scottish family living in slum housing and shows how tuberculosis was spread between family members, as well as how it was treated.
Tuberculous dactylitis, also known as spina ventosa, is a skeletal manifestation of tuberculosis, one of the commonest forms of bacterial osteitis. It affects children more often than adults. The first radiological description of the condition is credited to Feilchenfeld in 1896; however, the first histological description was given by Rankin in 1886. The Swedish botanist and physician Carl von Linne was the first to mention the condition by the name spina ventosa.
Herbert Durham was a British physician and distinguished scientist.
Alfredo Kanthack (1863-1898) was a Brazilian-born microbiologist and pathologist who worked in England. His distinguished career was cut short by his premature death at the age of 35.
Jean Antoine Ernest Troisier was a French doctor and biologist who headed a laboratory of the Pasteur Institute for several years. He was recognized as an authority on tuberculosis and cancer.
Stewart Ranken Douglas FRS was a British pathologist, bacteriologist and immunologist.
Janet McCarter Woolley was an American bacteriologist. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1944, for her work in immunology.
Sir Edmund Ivens Spriggs (1871–1949) was a British physician and medical researcher for gastric and intestinal disorders.
Abdominal tuberculosis is a type of extrapulmonary tuberculosis which involves the abdominal organs such as intestines, peritoneum and abdominal lymph nodes. It can either occur in isolation or along with a primary focus in patients with disseminated tuberculosis.
The Royal Commission on Tuberculosis (1896–1898), also known as the First Royal Commission on Tuberculosis, was an early investigation into the history of tuberculosis (TB). On 25 April 1895 the report was published as a parliamentary paper.