1996 Volume 71 Issue 10 Pages 555-559
In this study, we investigated 31 foreign patients who had been diagnosed as having pulmonary tuberculosis at the National Hiroshima Hospital or Hiroshima Anti Tuberculosis Association between 1982 to 1995. Their age ranged from 17 to 63 years, and all of them had been in Japan for less than five years. Twelve of the patients came from South America, 18 from Asia, and one from Egypt. Seven Peruvians had been infected in a tuberculosis outbreak. The reasons of their immigration were job-seeking (14 out of 31), education (8 out of 31), and marriage to Japanese men (6 out of 31). None of them were illegal immigrants. In four women who had married Japanese men, various symp toms such as cough, sputum, and slight fever came on during pregnancy, however, none of them had been diagnosed as having tuberculosis, and consequently they had received no medication during pregnancy. In 6 out of the 8 patients who were college students, their sputa were negative for tubercle bacilli, and they could be treated by chemotherapy as outpatients.
In provincial cities, every effort should be made to detect tuberculosis among members of the foreign community who are living under different environments and conditions.