Treatment Overview
Doctors treat
tuberculosis (TB) with
antibiotics to kill the TB bacteria. These medicines
are given to everyone who has TB, including infants, children, pregnant women,
and people who have a
weakened immune system.
People who have
TB that cannot be spread to others (latent TB) also
receive treatment to prevent the infection from becoming active.
When treating active TB, health experts recommend:6
When treating latent TB, experts recommend:1
- Using one medicine to kill the TB bacteria and prevent active
TB. The standard treatment is isoniazid taken for 9 months. For people who
cannot take isoniazid for 9 months, sometimes a 6-month treatment program is
done.
- Treatment with rifampin for 4 months. This is an acceptable
alternate treatment, especially for people who have been exposed to bacteria
that is resistant to isoniazid.
Treatment for extrapulmonary tuberculosis
Treatment for tuberculosis in parts of the body other than the lungs
(extrapulmonary TB) usually is the same as for
pulmonary TB. You may need other medicines or forms of treatment depending on
where the infection is in the body and whether complications develop.
You may need treatment in a hospital if you
have:
- Severe symptoms.
- TB that is
resistant to multiple-drug therapy.
What To Think About
For active TB, there are
different treatment recommendations for people with HIV and TB, people with
drug-resistant TB, children with active TB, and pregnant women with active
TB.
If you miss doses of medicine or you stop treatment too soon,
your treatment may go on longer or you may have to start over. This can also
cause the infection to get worse or lead to antibiotic-resistant infections
that are much harder to treat.
A cure for TB requires you to take
all doses of the antibiotics. This may mean daily visits with a health
professional who watches you take the medicine. This is known as directly
observed therapy (DOT).
Taking all of the medicines is especially
important for people who have an impaired immune system. They may be at an
increased risk for a relapse because the original TB infection was never
cured.
Relapses usually occur within 6 to 12 months after
treatment. Treatment for relapse is based on the severity of the disease and
which medicines were used during the first treatment.
Doctors also
use medicine treatment to prevent people with a latent TB infection from
developing active TB. Health experts recommend this for people who have a
positive tuberculin skin test but no symptoms of TB. Treatment is especially
important for people with latent TB who:
- Have HIV infection or AIDS.
- Have
close contact with a person who has active TB.
- Have a chest X-ray
that suggests a TB infection, but have not had a complete course of
treatment.
- Inject illegal drugs.
- Have a medical
condition or take medicine that weakens the immune system.
- Have had
a tuberculin skin test within the past 2 years that was negative but now the
skin test is showing a TB infection (positive).