Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repo.knmu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/4991
Title: Diphtheria. Tuberculosis
Authors: Циганенко, Анатолій Якович
Коваленко, Наталя Іллівна
Tsyganenko, A.
Kovalenko, N.
Keywords: diphtheria
tuberculosis
diagnosis
structure
transmission
pathogenesis
immunity
control
treatment
Issue Date: 2012
Citation: Tsyganenko A. Ya. Diphtheria. Tuberculosis: methodical instructions for the II and III year English media students of medical and dentistry faculties / A. Ya. Tsyganenko, N. I. Kovalenko. – Kharkiv : Kharkiv National Medical University, 2012. – 24 p.
Abstract: In parts of the world where diphtheria still occurs, it is primarily a disease of children, and most individuals who survive infancy and childhood have acquired immunity to diphtheria. In earlier times, when nonimmune populations were exposed to the disease, people of all ages were infected and many were killed. Diphtheria is a serious disease, with fatality rates between 5% and 10%. In children under five years and adults over 40 years, the fatality rate may be as much as 20%. Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death in the world from a single infectious disease. The disease affects 2.7 billion people per year which is equal to one-third of the entire world population. Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.TB.) was the cause of the "White Plague" of the 17th and 18th centuries in Europe. During this period nearly 100 % of the European population was infected with M.TB., and 25 % of all adult deaths were caused by M.TB.
URI: https://repo.knmu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/4991
Appears in Collections:Навчально-методичні видання. Кафедра мікробіології, вірусології та імунології імені професора Д.П. Гриньова

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