Off the wire
Tian'anmen Square gets make-over for grand WWII parade  • 1st LD Writethru: Clash in wedding party claims 20 lives, wounds 10 in N. Afghanistan  • FLASH: CLASH KILLS 20, WOUNDS DOZEN OTHERS IN WEDDING PARTY IN AFGHANISTAN--OFFICIAL  • Urgent: Clash in wedding party claims 20 lives, wounds 10 in N. Afghanistan  • Roundup: Pan Am Games end up fine, Toronto up for Olympic bid  • Melbourne to host football's International Champions Cup until at least 2018  • China's industrial profits down 0.3 pct in June  • Palmeiras jump to third after Pereira brace  • New Zealand annual fruit exports hit record high  • Brazilian soccer results  
You are here:   Home

Patients with diabetes more likely to develop tuberculosis: Australian study

Xinhua, July 27, 2015 Adjust font size:

Patients with diabetes are much more likely to develop tuberculosis in the tropics than the general population, Australian scientists revealed Monday.

A 20-year James Cook University (JCU) study, which looked at data from the Townsville Hospital in northern Queensland from 1995- 2014, has found the weakened immune systems of diabetics make them more vulnerable to tuberculosis (TB) than the general population.

Director of Microbiology at Townsville Hospital, Dr Robert Norton said on Monday people with diabetes suffered from "immune dysregulation" and were more prone to contracting the deadly infection.

"You can have TB your whole life and not know it, but if you suffer from diabetes and your immune system is not functioning well, it can flare up," Norton said.

The study, published in American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, showed that while the overall numbers were lower, the proportion of diabetics developing TB was the same as in less- developed countries.

Scientists had assumed that higher standards of care for diabetic patients in Australia and the relative rarity of TB meant there was not as strong a link between the two ailments.

Norton said the findings support the view that there must be screening of patients with diabetes for latent TB in any setting.

"It is especially important because the prevalence of type two diabetes is increasing at a very significant pace," Norton said.

Tuberculosis, which commonly affects the lungs, remains the leading cause of bacterial death worldwide despite improvements in sanitation and antibiotic coverage over the last century.

It is estimated that if diabetes could be reduced by 35 percent globally, 1.5 million TB deaths and 7.8 million infections could be prevented. Endi