Topic Overview
What is tuberculosis?
Tuberculosis (TB) is an
infection caused by slow-growing bacteria that grow best in areas of the body
that have lots of blood and oxygen. That’s why it is most often found in the
lungs
. This is called pulmonary TB. But TB can also
spread to other parts of the body, which is called
extrapulmonary TB. Treatment is often a success, but
it is a long process. It takes about 6 to 9 months to treat TB.
Tuberculosis is either latent or active.
- Latent TB means that
you have the TB bacteria in your body, but your body’s defenses (immune system)
are keeping it from turning into active TB. This means that you don't have any
symptoms of TB right now and can't spread the disease to others. If you have
latent TB, it can become active TB.
- Active TB means that the TB bacteria are
growing and causing symptoms. If your lungs are infected with active TB, it is
easy to spread the disease to others.
How is TB spread to others?
Pulmonary TB (in the
lungs) is contagious. It spreads when a person who has active TB breathes out
air that has the TB bacteria in it and then another person breathes in the
bacteria from the air. An infected person releases even more bacteria when he
or she does things like cough or laugh.
If TB is only in other
parts of the body (extrapulmonary TB), it does not spread easily to
others.
Who is most at risk for TB?
Some people are more
likely than others to get TB. This includes people who:
- Have
HIV or another illness that weakens their immune
system.
- Have close contact with someone who has active TB, such as
living in the same house as someone who is infected with TB.
- Care
for a patient who has active TB, such as doctors or nurses.
- Live
or work in crowded places such as prisons, nursing homes, or homeless shelters,
where other people may have active TB.
- Have poor access to health
care, such as homeless people and migrant farm workers.
- Abuse drugs
or alcohol.
- Travel to or were born in places where untreated TB is
common, such as Latin America, Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, and Russia.
It is important for people who are at a high risk for
getting TB to get tested once or twice every year.
What are the symptoms?
Most of the time when
people are first infected with TB, the disease is so mild that they don't even
know they have it. People with
latent TB don't have symptoms unless the disease
becomes active.
Symptoms of active TB may include:
- A cough that brings up thick, cloudy, and sometimes bloody
mucus from the lungs (called
sputum) for more than 2 weeks.
- Tiredness
and weight loss.
- Night sweats and a fever.
- A rapid
heartbeat.
- Swelling in the neck (when
lymph nodes in the neck are infected).
- Shortness of breath and chest pain (in rare cases).
How is TB diagnosed?
Doctors usually find latent
TB by doing a tuberculin skin test. During the skin test, a doctor or nurse
will inject TB
antigens under your skin. If you have TB bacteria in
your body, within 2 days you will get a red bump where the needle went into
your skin. The test can't tell when you became infected with TB or if it can be
spread to others.
To find pulmonary TB, doctors test a sample of
mucus from the lungs (sputum) to see if there are TB bacteria in it. Doctors
sometimes take a chest X-ray to help find pulmonary TB.
To find
extrapulmonary TB, doctors can take a sample of tissue (biopsy) to test. Or you might get a
CT scan or an
MRI so the doctor can see pictures of the inside of
your body.
How is it treated?
Most of the time, doctors
combine four
antibiotics to treat active TB. It’s important to take
the medicine for active TB for at least 6 months. Almost all people are cured
if they take their medicine just like their doctors say to take it. If tests
still show an active TB infection after 6 months, then treatment continues for
another 2 or 3 months.
Most people with latent TB are treated
with only one antibiotic that they take for 9 months. This reduces their risk
for getting active TB.
If you miss doses of your medicine, or if
you stop taking your medicine too soon, your treatment may fail or have to go
on longer. You may have to start your treatment over again. This can also cause
the infection to get worse or lead to an infection that is
resistant to antibiotics. This is much harder to
treat.
TB can only be cured if you take all the doses of your
medicine. A doctor or nurse may have to watch you take it to make sure that you
never miss a dose and that you take it the proper way. You may have to go to
the doctor's office every day. Or a nurse may come to your home or work. This
is called direct observational treatment. It helps people follow all of the
instructions and keep up with their treatment, which can be complex and take a
long time. Cure rates for TB have greatly improved because of this type of
treatment.
If active TB is not treated, it can damage your lungs
or other organs and can be deadly.
Frequently Asked Questions
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