Transcript for:
The White Death: Tuberculosis

Hello, Steve here. Today I am moving over  as the voice of kurzgesagt for something   really special. Our dearest friend John Green would like to tell you a story that's very close to his heart. So, let's hear it from him directly. Hey, John! Hey, Steve. Thanks so much! Lets dive right in: The white death has haunted humanity like  no other disease following us for thousands,   maybe millions of years. It  was there when we tamed fire,   invented culture, and ventured out of Africa  to conquer the world. In 1815 it caused one   in four deaths in Britain. In the last  200 years it killed a billion people,   way more than all wars and natural disasters  combined. Even today it’s the infectious disease   with the highest kill count. But… Do you even  know what we are talking about? We’re talking   about Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which causes  tuberculosis or TB – our original arch enemy. Right now one in four humans alive are infected  with the bacterium – you may be one of them. So   how is it possible that we never hear about TB? Well, the White Death is the perfect human predator: Very infectious but very quiet   most of the time, careful not to murder  recklessly. Perfectly adapted to your immune   system and just physically incredibly hard  to kill. What exactly makes it so powerful? The Perfect Human Predator Usually the bacterium enters your body through  the airways and sets up home in the lungs,   a giant living cave system, defended by billions  of macrophages, powerful guard cells that hunt   and kill intruders. The TB bug is quickly  attacked and devoured alive. Unfortunately   this is its plan. The white death is the worst  kind of parasite – an immune system parasite. Macrophages grab their victims,  trap them inside a phagosome and   flood it with acid that rips them to pieces. But TB evolved a thick, waxy coat that makes   it completely immune to those acids. Worse,  it captures and modifies the macrophage to   be a perfect host. Like a tiny vampire, the  parasite slowly consumes the cell. TB then   replicates extremely slowly. Other microbes that  make you sick multiply up to 60 times faster,   exploding their numbers before the immune  system can eradicate them. But the white death   is so well adapted to you, it has already  won by being here. No need to rush things. When its host cell is sucked dry and dies,   the bacteria infect new macrophages.  Although these bacteria are stealthy,   the decaying corpses they leave behind do  activate a proper immune response – your   body knows something is up and mobilizes its  forces. But once again, this is part of the plan. Macrophages and many other immune cells try to kill the bacteria, but that thick   cell wall makes them a formidable fortress and  resistant to many attacks. And it infects its   attackers in the process. So when your cells  can’t kill them they do the next best thing:   keep the parasites from escaping. A granuloma is  formed, a sort of white blob. In the center is a   core of infected and dead macrophages – a pleasant  home and food for the bacterium. Other immune   cells surround this sphere of death to contain it  – creating a safespace where TB can sit for years.   Worse, it is perfectly protected from medication  and releases chemicals that make it hard for your   heavy immune weapons to be activated. This  is the stalemate version of Tuberculosis.   The infection is sleeping and the bacteria is  doing its thing. This is going on right now in   up to two billion people! But in one in ten of them, the disease will become active. Active Tuberculosis is an emergency. But again, a  slow one. If your immune system can’t contain the   infection anymore, granulomas burst. Suddenly  your lungs are filled with macrophage corpses   and fresh bacteria. Your immune system panics  and overreacts. Hordes of soldiers leave your   blood and rush to the infected areas. They  order inflammation and fluids flood into   your lungs. But unfortunately, your lungs are  not made to be a battlefield. In their panic,   your immune cells don’t care – they’re  running around with flamethrowers,   trying to purge the infection  but causing terrible damage. As fluids and dead tissue amass, it becomes  difficult to breathe and you begin coughing hard,   sometimes even coughing up blood. And  again this is part of the plan because   now you spread millions of bacteria  catching rides in tiny droplets.  You burn a high fever and lose weight  as your body is severely stressed. You   turn into a ghost version of yourself.  Even if you are treated, this phase can   last weeks to months and is very serious.  Insufficiently treated, TB will over months,   years, or even decades slowly overtake your body.  Especially for children or those already weakened,   this can be too much and the disease wins the  war. The bacterium spreads to other organs,   lung function breaks down and the patient dies.  1.3 million people died this way in 2023 alone. The Worst Kind of Problem Tuberculosis is the worst kind of  problem: A slow one. Instead of killing   millions quickly like Covid, scaring a  panicked humanity into frantic action,   TB is a smoldering fire. Killing too  slowly for our short attention span. The symptoms are often mild for many months, so  you don’t feel in danger. Tuberculosis doesn’t   want to kill you of course, it wants to stay alive and spread. And to do this,   it exploits human behavior: The people you are  most likely to infect are your family and friends,   coworkers or neighbors, the people you spend a lot  of time with. When Covid brought the world to a   halt, the average patient infected 2-3 people. An  active TB patient infects 5 -15 people in a year. Most people catch it via breathing in tiny droplets from a cough or   sneeze. This is especially common in crowded,   poorly ventilated housing or workplaces.  Which is why TB exploded during the   Industrial Revolution. And indeed wherever we  see new unplanned and overcrowded urbanization,   from Lagos to St. Petersburg, we tend to  see a rise of the White Death alongside it. Today most cases of active Tuberculosis  – the version that spreads the disease   further – can be cured with a four-month  regimen of four different antibiotics. But   if that’s the case… How is this still the deadliest infectious disease on earth? Between 1940 and 1965, humans developed several  drugs to fight TB, finally making it curable.   It was a true achievement of human ingenuity.  But we didn’t do a great job of distributing   the cure. While Tuberculosis is almost extinct  in much of Europe, the US and the Middle East,   it is still a very real threat in most of the  world. TB kills people primarily in Africa,   South America and Asia. In 2022 two thirds  of all TB cases were in just six countries:   India, China, Indonesia, the Philippines,  Pakistan and Nigeria. Almost half of all   Tuberculosis deaths happened in South East Asia. But as it is a slow problem like climate change,  it was ignored instead of fought aggressively,   which enabled more and more strains of  TB to develop antibiotic resistance.   Which is a problem because we  kinda stopped making new drugs. In the first twentyfive years of the  antibiotic era, we developed eight   different classes of drugs to treat TB. And  then, in the 47 years between 1965 and 2012,   we developed none. Developing new drugs  is extremely expensive and there was no   concentrated effort to eradicate TB,  and there simply wasn’t enough profit   incentive. There is a vaccine, but it’s over  100 years old and not particularly effective. But beginning in 2012, we did finally develop  two new classes of drugs that treat TB,   and we may finally be at an inflection  point again, as better vaccines are on the   horizon. Companies that made Covid tests also developed a quick test for TB. So,   we now have a real opportunity to push  this disease back until it dies forever. But only if we get enough people to know about  TB – like you do now – and to care about it. A   century ago in the United States, there were  almost as many hospital beds for TB patients   as for treating all other illnesses and injuries  combined. The White Death was a leading cause of   death in the US and then one day it just  wasn’t anymore. And we can do this again. 4,000 people died of tuberculosis yesterday,  and we simply don’t have to accept a world   where so many of us still die of a disease  we know how to cure. The White Death has   been with us for millions of years. It is  time to continue our journey without it. If you want to learn more about  tuberculosis and the folks working   to fight it through clinical trials and care delivery and also learn how you can help,   check out the organization Partners in Health at pih.org/programs/tuberculosis. We’ve put   a link in the description for you. Also, if  this wasn’t enough TB for you, there’s a Crash   Course Lecture on the history and presence  of TB. We’ll include a link to that as well. Steve, I'll see you on Fri....no! This isn't Vlogbrothers...soon. I'll see you soon, Steve.