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    Nihon Hansenbyo Gakkai Zasshi. 2009 Sep;78(3):263-9.

    Why does tuberculosis lead to specific inflammation?

    Source

    The Research Institute of Tuberculosis, Kiyose, Tokyo, Japan. sugawara@jata.or.jp

    Abstract

    When Mycobacterium tuberculosis infects humans, about 20% of those infected actually develop tuberculosis (TB). In Japan, the incidence of TB in 2008 was 24,760 cases (19.4/100,000 persons) and the rate has been decreasing gradually, but is still higher than in the USA, Holland, and Belgium, for example. Histologically, tuberculosis displays exudative inflammation, proliferative inflammation and productive inflammation depending on the time course. In productive inflammation, granulomatous lesions with necrotic centers are formed. The typical granulomas consist of epithelioid macrophages, Langhans' multinucleated giant cells, lymphocytes and fibroblasts, and the process of their formation involves many cytokines, chemokines and transcription factors. These findings have been derived primarily from animal experiments utilizing an airborne infection apparatus. The conditions for airborne infection have been described in detail elsewhere. This mini-review focuses on what has been found through animal experiments, and also indicates areas for which data are not currently available.

    PMID:
    19803377
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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