Staphylococcus aureus is a gram-positive bacterium that colonises the skin and is present in the anterior nares in about 25-30% of healthy people. Dependent on its intrinsic virulence or the ability of the host to contain its opportunistic behaviour, S aureus can cause a range of diseases in man. The bacterium readily acquires resistance against all classes of antibiotics by one of two distinct mechanisms: mutation of an existing bacterial gene or horizontal transfer of a resistance gene from another bacterium. Several mobile genetic elements carrying exogenous antibiotic resistance genes might mediate resistance acquisition. Of all the resistance traits S aureus has acquired since the introduction of antimicrobial chemotherapy in the 1930s, meticillin resistance is clinically the most important, since a single genetic element confers resistance to the most commonly prescribed class of antimicrobials--the beta-lactam antibiotics, which include penicillins, cephalosporins, and carbapenems.
BackgroundThe prognosis, specifically the case fatality and duration, of untreated
tuberculosis is important as many patients are not correctly diagnosed and
therefore receive inadequate or no treatment. Furthermore, duration and case
fatality of tuberculosis are key parameters in interpreting epidemiological
data.Methodology and Principal FindingsTo estimate the duration and case fatality of untreated pulmonary
tuberculosis in HIV negative patients we reviewed studies from the
pre-chemotherapy era. Untreated smear-positive tuberculosis among HIV
negative individuals has a 10-year case fatality variously reported between
53% and 86%, with a weighted mean of 70%. Ten-year case
fatality of culture-positive smear-negative tuberculosis was nowhere
reported directly but can be indirectly estimated to be approximately
20%. The duration of tuberculosis from onset to cure or death is
approximately 3 years and appears to be similar for smear-positive and
smear-negative tuberculosis.ConclusionsCurrent models of untreated tuberculosis that assume a total duration of 2
years until self-cure or death underestimate the duration of disease by
about one year, but their case fatality estimates of 70% for
smear-positive and 20% for culture-positive smear-negative
tuberculosis appear to be satisfactory.
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