首页    期刊浏览 2025年07月15日 星期二
登录注册

文章基本信息

  • 标题:Certain characteristics of BCG-induced tuberculin sensitivity
  • 作者:WHO Tuberculosis Research Office
  • 期刊名称:Bulletin of the World Health Organization
  • 印刷版ISSN:0042-9686
  • 出版年度:1955
  • 卷号:12
  • 期号:1-2
  • 页码:123-141
  • 语种:English
  • 出版社:World Health Organisation
  • 摘要:Post-vaccination tuberculin sensitivity is being used to evaluate the immediate effects of the extensive WHO/UNICEF mass BCG vaccination programmes currently in progress. During the past five years the Tuberculosis Research Office has been studying the tuberculin sensitivity produced by BCG vaccination, and the present paper discusses some of the most important characteristics of BCG-induced allergy. The material for the paper was drawn from the results in five countries of vaccinating more than 6,000 schoolchildren and retesting them at one or more intervals after vaccination. Tuberculin sensitivity produced by BCG is not the kind of response that may logically be described as “positive” or “negative”. Rather, vaccination always produces, or increases, sensitivity to tuberculin, although, with some vaccines and in some persons, the degree of sensitivity produced may be low. BCG-induced allergy can best be described by the distribution of the sizes of the tuberculin reactions and summarized by the mean and standard deviation of the distribution. The common practice of classifying post-vaccination reactions as “positive” or “negative” is biologically meaningless and may be the cause of many fallacious notions about the allergy produced by BCG. The degree of post-vaccination allergy varies with the potency of the vaccine used: a potent vaccine has been shown to produce allergy about as strong as that produced by natural infection wherever carefully controlled studies have been made. No evidence was found that allergy wanes or is lost after intradermal vaccination: the impression that it does so may often have been the consequence of the practice of revaccination and of ignoring the influence of experimental error. Unless very weak vaccines are used, there is no indication that superinfection can be identified after vaccination. The diagnostic value of the tuberculin test is thus being destroyed in many places where mass campaigns are being done, particularly in those places where a high degree of tuberculin sensitivity is being produced. Full text Full text is available as a scanned copy of the original print version. Get a printable copy (PDF file) of the complete article (2.1M), or click on a page image below to browse page by page. Links to PubMed are also available for Selected References . 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141
Loading...
联系我们|关于我们|网站声明
国家哲学社会科学文献中心版权所有