[Immunological correction in progressive pulmonary tuberculosis].
Maslennikov. A A AA; Kamenev. V F VF; Kolomiets. V M VM
Key Findings
- Adding immunological correction increased TB cure rates (up to 94.7% in the best group)
- Mortality dropped when the immune therapy was used alongside drugs
- Tailoring the immune treatment to each patient’s condition gave the biggest benefit
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the data suggest thymalin might help the immune system in serious infections, but there’s no clear protocol for healthy people. More research is needed before using it for general longevity or performance purposes.
Summary
The study looked at adding a special immune‑boosting treatment (likely the peptide thymalin) to standard TB drugs. Patients who got the extra immune therapy healed faster and had lower death rates, especially when the treatment was tailored to each person. However, this was done in sick TB patients, not healthy volunteers, so it doesn’t give direct tips for everyday health or longevity hacks.
Abstract
The authors used their immunological correction method to treat 154 patients with progressive pulmonary tuberculosis. Of them, 38 patients received standard antituberculosis therapy (Group 1), 39 had additionally paravasal lymphotrophic immunological correction (Group 2), and 38 took antituberculous drugs in accordance with individual regimens (Group 3), and 39 patients were treated by individual regimens during immunological correction (Group 4). After termination of the basic course of chemotherapy, clinical cure was achieved in 61.1, 76.3, 72.2, and 94.7%, respectively (p < 0.05). During the basic course, mortality was 11.1, 5.3, and 5.5% in the first three groups. By taking into account the immunological status of patients with caseous pneumonia, disseminated, and multicavernous pulmonary tuberculous lesion, immunological correction is indicated early in the basic course of therapy.
Study Information
pubmed
2007