Symptoms
If you have latent
tuberculosis (TB), you do not have symptoms and cannot
spread the disease to others. If you have active TB, you do have symptoms and
can spread the disease to others. Which specific symptoms you have will depend
on whether your TB infection is in your lungs (the most common site) or in
another part of your body (extrapulmonary TB).
There are other
conditions with symptoms similar to TB, such as
pneumonia or lung cancer.
Symptoms of active TB in the lungs
Symptoms of active TB in the lungs begin gradually and develop
over a period of weeks or months. You may have one or two mild symptoms and not
even know that you have the disease.
Common symptoms include:
- A cough with thick, cloudy, and sometimes
bloody mucus from the lungs (sputum) for more than 2
weeks.
- Fever, chills, and night sweats.
- Fatigue and
weakness.
- Loss of appetite and unexplained weight
loss.
- Shortness of breath and chest pain.
Symptoms of an active TB infection outside the lungs
Symptoms of TB outside the lungs (extrapulmonary
TB) vary widely depending on which area of the body is infected. For
example, back pain can be a symptom of TB in the spine, or your neck may get
swollen neck when
lymph nodes in the neck are infected.