Topic Overview
What is tuberculosis?
Tuberculosis (TB) is a bacterial infection that is most often
found in the
lungs
(pulmonary TB) but can spread to other parts of
the body (extrapulmonary TB). TB in the lungs is easily spread
to other people through coughing or laughing. Treatment is often successful,
though the process is long. Treatment time averages between 6 and 9
months.
Tuberculosis is either latent (dormant) or active.
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Latent TB means that
you have the TB-causing bacteria in your body, but you cannot spread the
disease to others. However, you can still develop active TB.
-
Active TB means the infection is spreading in your body and,
if your lungs are infected, you can spread the disease to others.
What causes tuberculosis?
Tuberculosis is caused by Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, slow-growing bacteria that thrive in areas of the body
that are rich in blood and oxygen, such as the lungs.
What are the symptoms?
If you have latent TB, you will not have symptoms unless the
disease becomes active. Most people don't know that they have latent TB.
Symptoms of active TB may include:
- Ongoing cough that brings up thick, cloudy,
and sometimes bloody mucus from the lungs (sputum).
- Fatigue and weight loss.
- Night sweats and
fever.
- Rapid heartbeat.
- Swelling in the neck (when
lymph nodes in the neck are
infected).
- Shortness of breath and chest pain (in rare
cases).
Sometimes, when you are first infected, the disease is so mild
you don't know you have it. This is also true for people with latent TB because
they have no symptoms.
How is TB spread to others?
People who have a latent TB infection cannot spread the
disease.
TB in the lungs (pulmonary TB) is contagious. It spreads when a
person who has active disease exhales air that contains TB-causing bacteria and
another person inhales the bacteria from the air.
TB in other areas outside of the lungs (extrapulmonary TB) cannot
spread easily to others.
How is TB diagnosed?
Latent TB is usually found through a tuberculin skin test (also
called a TB skin test, PPD test, or Mantoux test) or a blood test. Active TB is
diagnosed by finding the TB-causing bacteria in fluid from the lungs (sputum)
or in samples from other parts of the body. Doctors sometimes use a chest X-ray
to help diagnose active TB.
Extrapulmonary TB is diagnosed by a
biopsy and
culture,
CT scan, or
MRI.
How is it treated?
Doctors generally use a combination of four
antibiotics to treat active TB, whether it occurs in
the lungs or elsewhere. Medications for active TB must be taken for at least 6
months. Almost all people who take their medications as directed are cured. If
tests continue to show an active TB infection, treatment is extended for 8 to 9
months.
One antibiotic taken for 9 months is the usual treatment for
latent TB. This prevents the infection from becoming active and reduces the
risk of complications.
If you miss doses of medication 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 health professional may have to watch you take your
medications. This may mean daily visits to a doctor's office or public health
facility. Or the health professional may come to your home or workplace. A cure
for TB requires you to take all doses of the antibiotics. Direct observational
treatment ensures that people follow medication instructions, which is helpful
because of the long treatment course for TB. Cure rates for TB have greatly
improved because of this treatment practise.
If active TB is not treated, it can damage the lungs or other
organs and can possibly cause death.
Frequently Asked Questions
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