Aarogya - The Wellness Site

Thursday, May 17th

Last update:01:44:00 AM IST

Recent Posts:
Home News and Updates Year 2012 Delhi Team Says It’s Not Incurable TB

Delhi Team Says It’s Not Incurable TB

E-mail Print
Times of India
20 January 2012
Mumbai India

It’s not totally drug–resistant tuberculosis but XXDR TB that has hit Mumbai. After over 10 days of hectic activity, Union health officials on Wednesday pronounced that Mumbai’s Hinduja Hospital had been “premature’’ in labelling 12 patients as TDR–TB patients.

“It’s XXDR TB,’’ said the Delhi team led by Dr Ashok Kumar who is deputy director general (TB) in the Union health ministry. The team underlined that there is “no situation of totally drug resistant TB’’. XXDR TB stands for extensively drug–resistant TB as against XDR (extremely) and MDR (multi–) versions. “There is no doomsday situation in India,’’ said the Delhi health ministry team.

Delhi Team Says It’s Not Incurable TB

To settle the medical arguments completely, the state government will send all the 12 samples to Bangalore’s National TB Institute. “The samples will be sent on Thursday morning,’’ said Dr P Gaikwad, who is the state TB in–charge. Wednesday’s press briefing marked the culmination of a medical drama that began in January’s first week with Hinduja Hospital, Mahim, publishing a medical research paper in Clinical Infectious Diseases about the emergence of TDR–TB in 12 patients. With the world watching India, a public health exercise began that involved tracing every patients and their families.

Wednesday’s conclusion was tinged with hope and recovery—mainly for the 12 original TDR–TB patients. While three died between October 2011 and now, two are outside Mumbai’s jurisdiction. “Of the seven patients in Mumbai, four tested negative and three who tested positive are responding well to treatment,’’ said Jayant Bantia, Maharashtra’s chief additional secretary (public health).

The seven were subjected to the basic TB test called sputum microscopy in various municipal labs in the city. And the medicines that appear to be working for them are special drugs that are outside the defined purview of TB treatment. “These patients are under salvage treatment using drugs that are meant for other conditions,’’ said Dr R K Jindal, one of the experts in the central team. Some of these salvage drugs are usually used to treat conditions such as leprosy or staph infections.

The nine surviving patients have been absorbed by the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Program (RNTCP), said Bantia. “Even the two patients from outside Mumbai (namely from Ratnagiri and Bhayander) have been absorbed by RNTCP. The state government will take care of their treatment costs,’’ he added.

The salvage treatment can cost up to Rs 5 lakh for the entire treatment, as against Rs 2 lakh for the MDR treatment. The expert, who is attached to PGIMER in Chandigarh, said that there is nothing defined in the World Health Organization’s armament as TDR–TB. “There will always some drug that works on patients,’’ he said.

Disclaimer: The news story on this page is the copyright of the cited publication. This has been reproduced here for visitors to review, comment on and discuss. This is in keeping with the principle of ‘Fair dealing’ or ‘Fair use’. Visitors may click on the publication name, in the news story, to visit the original article as it appears on the publication’s website.


Comments (0)Add Comment
Write comment
All fields marked with * are required

The comment option is for expressing your comments on the article/content.Please do not use it to ask queries. It is difficult for us to keep track of the numerous comments and forward them to the concerned doctor/s.Comments are published and form part of the page, it would be incorrect to have medical queries which are personal in nature, be available for public viewing.If you have a specific medical query, please use the Health Directory/Ask The Doctor section or write to info@aarogya.com.

 
 
smaller | bigger
 

security image
Write the displayed characters *


busy

About aarogya.com

 
aarogya.com aims to be India’s leading comprehensive health information portal. The site has sections, which cover almost all the medical specialties
read more…

Link to Aaraogya

 

Suggestions

 
This is YOUR site, so if you have suggestions or feedback on how we can improve it for you, please let us know! We do our best to keep up!

Make a Suggestion

Follow us