TB or not TB, that’s the question!
March 24th,
observed as World Tuberculosis (TB) Day, commemorates the day in 1882 when Dr. Robert
Koch announced the discovery of the miscreant responsible for colossal damage
across centuries – a microscopic organism called Mycobacterium tuberculosis. This year, the day unleashed a volley
of memories, which I thought were pen-worthy.
As an
undergraduate, the first time we were exposed to a live TB patient, was in our
clinical chest medicine posting in 2nd year MBBS. Till then, we knew
TB only as the disease caused by pink cylindrical bacteria seen through the
microscope. We half expected to see pink tall warriors ready to jump into our
lungs and infect us. Parents warned us of the perils of getting infected with
TB, and used the opportunity to instill in us the importance of a heavy
breakfast. We wore one or two face-masks for protection. With a heavy breakfast,
the double mask and white coat, we thought our armor was complete. As soon as
the classes finished, we ran as fast as we could back to our hostel. Who wanted
to contract the deadly disease! A few months later when I had a severe respiratory
infection, the doctor advised a Mantoux test for me. Reluctantly I got it done,
and the academic knowledge of the disease gave me cold sweats and sleepless
nights. Thankfully, I tested negative.
In the final
year of MBBS, a sudden inadequacy of medical knowledge created panic in us, the
students. We never wasted an opportunity to examine a patient with “findings”.
We spend hours in the wards to learn from patients, as even one missed point in
history or examination made us pay a heavy price in front of the professors (cutting
a sorry figure of oneself, in the professors` language). Once, during one such
clinical quest, we came across a middle-aged woman, Santhoshini, who supposedly
had “good lung findings.” (A patient with good findings usually does not have a
good prognosis!) We examined her to our heart`s content. Oh, the joy of a
drooped shoulder and a dull percussion note! We covered her with stethoscopes
on all sides, heard those magical sounds, filled our hearts and books, thanked
her profusely, and started to leave with our heads held high. As we were
leaving, the resident-in-charge of the ward, who was deeply engrossed in his
work for the past 2 hours, looked up at us and said, “If you guys are planning
to go near Santhoshini, please wear a mask and go, as she is an open case of
TB. She keeps removing her mask. God knows how many people she would have infected
by now!”
Our once
proud heads stooped low. The sparkle in our eyes dimmed with fear. Our brains
froze. In our hype for clinical knowledge, we neither wore masks, nor did we
ask the patient to wear. She was breathing and coughing all over us. We scampered
back to our rooms in disappointment, embarrassment and with a feeling of
imminent doom. For a few months, we tried to keep ourselves healthy, for fear
that a weakened immune system may blow up the disease.
During pediatric
residency time, our emphasis was not just on the findings, we were expected to diagnose
and treat patients too. We were taught to suspect TB for any patient with
prolonged or unexplainable symptoms. TB had ameboid manifestations affecting
any bodily system and mimicking any disease. The titanic spectrum intrigued us.
There was a sick-looking mother who brought a five-month-old baby with
unrelenting cough. Baby had enlarged abdominal organs and a bad lung. Both baby
and mother were diagnosed to have TB and started on treatment. A preadolescent
boy brought up by his father and stepmother whose mother passed away ten years
back due to an unknown illness. He was diagnosed to have TB with HIV infection.
Then there was the adolescent girl who came with emaciation and a very bad
lung. Then an adolescent boy with diabetes mellitus and lung fistula. A girl
with paralysis. Another girl in coma who took treatment too late. Yet another
case where the patient was brought in the end stage with hydrocephalus (excess
fluid in the brain). The stories never end. The magic of timely treatment was
fascinating and fulfilling, but the fate of the unfortunate who did not get adequate
treatment or chose to be left out was tragic and heart-breaking.
The story
would not be complete if I don’t mention that some of my colleagues contracted
this nasty affliction from the patients whom they treated, in the form of
excessive weight loss, coughing out blood, intractable cough and so on. It
opened our eyes to the fact that no one is exempt from the powerful clutches of
the scourge. A healthy person may have a subclinical infection with a focus
remaining in the lung, which may flare up when the person becomes
immunocompromised. Health-care professionals need utmost protection and care
for the prevention and treatment of the disease. We care for the sick, but many
a time, we forget to take care of ourselves. Fortunately, all my colleagues
came out of the fire unscathed.
TB is a disease
still rampant in our country and has its roots deep and wide. The reprehensible
presence of tuberculosis in humans dates back to 2400-3400 BC; studies say that
evidence of TB was found in the spines of mummies. Hippocrates called the
disease as “phthisis”, a Greek term meaning consumption, indicating the wasting
associated with the disease. Indeed, the disease consumed the human species at
alarming ways and speeds. The battle against TB gained momentum in 1882, when Dr.
Robert Koch demonstrated the cause of the disease to be an organism called Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Discovery of
the first anti-tuberculous drug, Streptomycin, was a breakthrough in the
history of the disease. Since then many other drugs and treatment protocols
have been discovered to gain mastery over the disease; but TB has been
retaliating by persistence. It still continues to be one of the top ten causes
of deaths worldwide. However, the world health care system has been making
progress by leaps and bounds. The WHO "End TB Strategy", launched in 2014, is the
battle cry to end the epidemic by 2030.
The theme of
World TB day, 2019 was “It’s Time.” It’s time to stop ignoring symptoms like
cough persisting beyond two weeks, excessive loss of appetite or loss of
weight. It’s time to stop neglecting any symptom that seems to be treatment
resistant. Its time that we realize that there are simple cost-effective
investigations to detect TB infection, and the technology is advancing by the
hour. There are carefully formulated treatment protocols that are available
free of cost from the government. It’s time to stop thinking that we are powerless
against the hegemony of the disease. Its time to wake up from our slumber and
fight, because victory is in sight. Yes! It’s time for action, its time to end
TB.
Nice
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot akka :)
DeleteWell said angel👍
ReplyDeleteThanks :)
DeleteThis piece is need of the hour👍🏻 With availability of faster diagnosis and cheaper treatment we should be able to wipe out this disease..
ReplyDeleteThanks didi...yes we should!! :)
ReplyDelete