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  2. History of tuberculosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_tuberculosis

    In 2014, results of a new DNA study of a tuberculosis genome reconstructed from remains in southern Peru suggest that human tuberculosis is less than 6,000 years old. Even if researchers theorise that humans first acquired it in Africa about 5,000 years ago, [1] there is evidence that the first tuberculosis infection happened about 9,000 years ...

  3. Tuberculosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuberculosis

    Roughly one-quarter of the world's population has been infected with M. tuberculosis, [6] with new infections occurring in about 1% of the population each year. [11] However, most infections with M. tuberculosis do not cause disease, [169] and 90–95% of infections remain asymptomatic. [87] In 2012, an estimated 8.6 million chronic cases were ...

  4. Edward Livingston Trudeau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Livingston_Trudeau

    Trudeau's gravesite, St. Johns in the Wilderness Church, Paul Smiths, New York Edward Livingston Trudeau (October 5, 1848 – November 15, 1915) was an American physician who established the Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium at Saranac Lake for the treatment of tuberculosis.

  5. Alan L. Hart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_L._Hart

    He established Idaho's first fixed-location and mobile TB screening clinics and spearheaded the state's war against tuberculosis. Between 1933 and 1945 Hart traveled extensively through rural Idaho, covering thousands of miles while lecturing, conducting mass TB screenings, training new staff, and treating the effects of the epidemic.

  6. Theobald Smith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theobald_Smith

    Theobald Smith FRS(For) [1] HFRSE (July 31, 1859 – December 10, 1934) was a pioneering epidemiologist, bacteriologist, pathologist and professor. Smith is widely considered to be America's first internationally-significant medical research scientist.

  7. World Tuberculosis Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Tuberculosis_Day

    World Tuberculosis Day, observed on 24 March each year, is designed to build public awareness about the global epidemic of tuberculosis (TB) and efforts to eliminate the disease. In 2018, 10 million people fell ill with TB, and 1.5 million died from the disease, mostly in low and middle-income countries .

  8. International Congress on Tuberculosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Congress_on...

    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.

  9. H37Rv - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H37Rv

    Koch first discovered mycobacterium tuberculosis as the cause of tuberculosis in 1892 but the strains he studied were not preserved and it is unclear how related H37Rv may be to those strains. H37Rv has continued to be the strain of tuberculosis most used in laboratories, and was the first to have its complete genome published in 1998. [ 5 ]