What Do You Know About Tuberculosis?
Many people think tuberculosis (TB) is no longer a threat, but it's still a leading killer worldwide. One-third of the world’s population (about 2 billion people) are infected with the bacteria that cause TB.
1. How do you get TB?
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Tuberculosis is a disease that can affect any part of the body, but the infection most often targets the lungs. Most TB cases are caused by inhaling the bacteria. People can get TB when an infected person coughs, sneezes, speaks, sings, or laughs. Tuberculosis has been around for thousands of years, but it did not become a major health problem until the Industrial Revolution. Crowded living conditions helped it spread. In the 17th and 18th centuries, TB caused a quarter of all adult deaths in Europe. Only the active form of the disease is contagious. Some people have inactive TB, or latent TB. This can't be spread to other people unless it becomes activated for some reason.
2. Who is at risk of developing tuberculosis in this country?
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TB is especially common in people with HIV. Latent or inactive TB is more likely to become an active TB infection in someone with HIV. Other groups at risk for TB include people taking TNF antagonist medicines. These are medicines that suppress the immune system and are used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and lupus. Others at risk include the urban poor who live in crowded areas with little access to health care, those who inject IV drugs, people who are unhoused, prison inmates, people born in certain areas overseas, and health care workers.
3. What makes TB hard to diagnose?
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Many infectious diseases cause illness very quickly. With TB, a person can be infected with the bacteria, but not become sick with TB disease. This is called latent TB infection. A person with latent TB is not contagious and cannot pass TB on to others. If a person doesn't feel sick, they may be less likely to seek medical care or to be tested for TB. The other type of TB is active TB disease. Active TB may take several decades to occur—or it may develop soon after infection. Someone with active TB is contagious and can spread the disease to others. The active form may progress more quickly in people who have a weak immune system. Symptoms of active TB may be the same as other infections. TB testing is important to confirm TB.
4. What are the symptoms of active TB?
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Symptoms of active TB can depend on what part of the body has been infected. If active TB occurs in the lungs, the symptoms can include a cough lasting 3 weeks or more, pain in the chest area, a cough that brings blood or mucus, chills, fever, night sweats, and fatigue. TB can also affect a person’s brain, bones, kidneys, or spine.
5. How is TB diagnosed?
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The first step in diagnosing TB is a skin or blood test along with your health history. These will show if you have been exposed to the bacteria. For the skin test, or PPD, a substance called tuberculin is injected just under the skin on your forearm. After 48 to 72 hours, you return to your healthcare provider, who checks the site for a positive or negative reaction. A positive skin test does not mean you have active TB. It simply means that you were exposed to the bacterium at some point or may have received the TB vaccine, called BCG. The TB blood test is called interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA). IGRA measures a person's immune response to TB exposure. If the skin or blood test results require more analysis, your healthcare provider will order and X-ray or CT scan of the lungs to check for signs of active or old/healed tuberculosis. The provider may also take samples of morning sputum and stain it to check for TB bacteria. The sputum may also be sent for culture of the bacteria. This may take several weeks to show a positive result.
6. How is TB treated?
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Treatment involves one or more antibiotics that you take for 4 to 12 months. It's important that you take your medicine on time every day or exactly as directed. Some medicines for TB can be given 1, 2, or 3 imes per week. If you stop taking the medicine before the end of treatment, you risk having TB return. TB that returns may be resistant to medicines used to treat it. This makes it much more difficult to cure. If you have a positive skin test for TB, but no other signs of the disease, your provider may ask you to take 1 or 2 antibiotic for 3 to 9 months to kill any TB bacteria in your body and prevent development of active TB in the future.
7. What has caused TB to become a serious public health problem?
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The number of TB cases began dropping in the 1940s and 1950s, when antibiotics were first used to treat the disease. But after 1985, the number of TB cases started to rise again. One factor was the AIDS epidemic. People with HIV infection are at higher risk of developing active TB if their HIV is not controlled. People emigrating from higher-risk areas of the world and those who live in crowded homeless shelters are at higher risk of developing active TB. People who don't stick with their TB treatment are at risk of developing medicine-resistant TB. People who are taking medicines that suppress their immune system are at risk for active tuberculosis.
8. Who in the U.S. should receive a vaccine for TB?
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Although a vaccine (BCG) is available, it is not recommended in this country because the rate of TB infection is low and because vaccinating people would make the TB skin test less useful. Someone vaccinated against TB may show a positive skin test even if not infected, especially in the few years following vaccination. Infants who live in areas of the world where TB is common should be vaccinated against TB. The vaccine does not work very well in adults.
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