Tuberculosis Testing

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Slide, 'Tubercle Bacillus in Sputum.'

Slide, “Tubercle Bacillus in Sputum.” Showing the disease-causing bacteria, Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Made for educational and research purposes by the New York City Public Health Department, late 19th–early 20th century.

Tuberculosis (TB) is a disease that dates back at least to ancient Egypt and likely has been with humanity much longer. The bacterial infection can attack many parts of the body, including the kidneys, brain, and spine. It most commonly presents itself, however, as an infection of the lungs. When active, its symptoms include coughing, chest pain, weight loss, night sweats, and fever. If untreated, it can be fatal.

Although no effective cure for tuberculosis existed until the discovery of streptomycin in the 1940s, people have long endeavored to prevent, treat, and test for TB.

The hallmark symptom of pulmonary tuberculosis is the production of thick and sometimes bloody discharge from the lungs. For both discreteness and sanitary purposes, TB patients in the late-19th and early-20th centuries sometimes used sputum cups or flasks to collect their mucus. Glass or metal flasks were rinsed and reused, while disposable paper cups could be burned after use.

 

 

Glass screw top sputum flask, early 1900s

Glass screw top sputum flask, early 1900s

Paper sputum cup, about 1900

Paper sputum cup, about 1900

Fresh air was long considered a beneficial treatment for TB. Starting in the mid-19th century, sanatoria in countryside locales became popular sites for patients to retreat and rest.

A man rests on a roof in New York City at the Bellevue Tuberculosis Clinic, 1909.
Vase, Arequipa Pottery, circa 1913–1916

Left: A man rests on a roof in New York City at the Bellevue Tuberculosis Clinic, 1909. Right: Vase, Arequipa Pottery, circa 1913–1916. Arequipa Pottery was established as a Progressive Era experiment in occupational therapy for tuberculosis patients at Dr. Philip King Brown's private Arequipa Sanatorium near Fairfax, California. King argued that requiring his patients to work in the pottery provided them with moral and physical benefits, and allowed people of limited financial means to pay for the healthcare provided by his facility.

With the success of serum treatment for diphtheria and tetanus in the late 19th century, researchers developed anti-tubercle serum. Unfortunately, the anti-tubercle treatment proved ineffective. Earlier, in 1890, German bacteriologist Robert Koch had introduced tuberculin, which also failed as a TB cure. Koch’s injectable tuberculosis derivative found another important purpose, however, as the basis for diagnosing the disease. By 1907, use of the test led to the discovery that patients could be infected with TB without exhibiting symptoms, a condition known as latent TB.

Anti-tubercle serum, 1898

Anti-tubercle serum, 1898

Lederle TB tine test, about 1976.

Lederle TB tine test, about 1976. A pure, standardized TB test would not become available until the 1940s.

In 1921, French researchers Albert Calmette and Camille Guérin conducted the first trial of their TB vaccine. It came to be known as the BCG vaccine (Bacillus Camille-Guérin), a reference to their work to grow a weakened strain of the tuberculosis bacillus appropriate for use in a vaccine. Although the vaccine does not prevent infection, it does provide protection against the spread of the disease beyond the lungs and into the brain. Vaccination with BCG is not common in the United States, where TB levels are relatively low, but remains important in other countries.

It took researchers nearly twenty years after the first use of the BCG vaccine to develop effective tuberculosis cures. Several of these drugs are still in use today. Streptomycin, the first widely successful antibiotic against tuberculosis, was isolated from a soil sample at Rutgers University in 1943 by Albert Schatz in the laboratory of Selman Waksman.

A sample of streptomycin in a sealed test tube

A sample of streptomycin in a sealed test tube from the first lot produced at Rutgers University and sent to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, for the first animal trials.

The lower shoulder of this jar bears the inscription AGARICO. TROCISCATO. It would have held Agaricus Trochis, or agaric lozenges. Agaric is a type of fungus or mushroom, usually found at the base of trees.
Description
The lower shoulder of this jar bears the inscription AGARICO. TROCISCATO. It would have held Agaricus Trochis, or agaric lozenges. Agaric is a type of fungus or mushroom, usually found at the base of trees. The lozenge would be made by combining the fungus with ginger and a gum substnace, and were used to treat excessive sweats associated with scrofula, also known at different points in history as consumption and tuberculosis. According to theDictionary of Protopharmacology, Agaricus is a fungus, Boletus igniarius which is used to stop bleeding.
This drug jar belongs to a series of jars 1991.0664.0525 through 1991.0664.0529 which are attributed to eighteenth century Savona. They have a white background decorated with blue vines and yellow flowers. The center contains a coat of arms framed by a yellow shield and topped by a knight’s helmet. The escutcheon has a radiant yellow star at the top, three horizontal yellow stars on a white background in the center of the shield, and a lower field of blue and yellow stripes. The initials G.C. are on the lower left side of the shield, and the initial E is positioned at the lower right side of the shield.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1700
ID Number
1991.0664.0525
accession number
1991.0664
collector/donor number
SAP 449
catalog number
1991.0664.0525

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