tubercle bacillus
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: * The bacterium that causes tuberculosis: Tubercle bacillus is the common name for Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the specific pathogenic bacterium responsible for the infectious disease tuberculosis (TB). It is characterized by its rod-like shape and a waxy cell wall that makes it resistant to many common stains and disinfectants.
Usage
- The term is used in medical, microbiological, and historical contexts to refer to the causative agent of TB.
- It is often used when discussing the discovery, identification, or characteristics of the bacterium.
- Example: "Robert Koch identified the in 1882."
- Example: "The patient's sputum tested positive for the ."
Advanced Usage
- The term can be used in a broader, sometimes non-technical sense to symbolize the disease of tuberculosis itself.
- Example (historical/literary): "The fight against the defined much of 20th-century public health."
Variants and Related Words
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis (n): The formal, scientific name for the tubercle bacillus.
- TB bacillus (n): A common abbreviated synonym.
- Acid-fast bacillus (AFB) (n): A descriptive term based on its staining properties; a positive AFB test often indicates the presence of the tubercle bacillus.
Synonyms
- TB bacterium
- Koch's bacillus (historical)
Notes on Different Meanings
- The term has a single, specific medical meaning. It does not have general or idiomatic uses outside of its reference to the causative agent of tuberculosis. The word "tubercle" alone can refer to a small nodular lesion, but "tubercle bacillus" is a fixed compound noun with the specific definition above.
Noun
- cause of tuberculosis