[HTML][HTML] The pathogenesis of tuberculosis–the Koch phenomenon reinstated

RL Hunter - Pathogens, 2020 - mdpi.com
Pathogens, 2020mdpi.com
Research on the pathogenesis of tuberculosis (TB) has been hamstrung for half a century by
the paradigm that granulomas are the hallmark of active disease. Human TB, in fact,
produces two types of granulomas, neither of which is involved in the development of adult
type or post-primary TB. This disease begins as the early lesion; a prolonged subclinical
stockpiling of secreted mycobacterial antigens in foamy alveolar macrophages and nearby
highly sensitized T cells in preparation for a massive necrotizing hypersensitivity reaction …
Research on the pathogenesis of tuberculosis (TB) has been hamstrung for half a century by the paradigm that granulomas are the hallmark of active disease. Human TB, in fact, produces two types of granulomas, neither of which is involved in the development of adult type or post-primary TB. This disease begins as the early lesion; a prolonged subclinical stockpiling of secreted mycobacterial antigens in foamy alveolar macrophages and nearby highly sensitized T cells in preparation for a massive necrotizing hypersensitivity reaction, the Koch Phenomenon, that produces caseous pneumonia that is either coughed out to form cavities or retained to become the focus of post-primary granulomas and fibrocaseous disease. Post-primary TB progresses if the antigens are continuously released and regresses when they are depleted. This revised paradigm is supported by nearly 200 years of research and suggests new approaches and animal models to investigate long standing mysteries of human TB and vaccines that inhibit the early lesion to finally end its transmission.
MDPI