The Mercury News

IMPORTANT FACTS ABOUT TUBERCULOS­IS

-

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides the following informatio­n on tuberculos­is:

• The bacteria that cause the disease can be spread through the air by coughing, sneezing or even just speaking. People nearby can inhale the airborne germs.

• Many people who are infected have latent TB, without symptoms. If untreated, the latent infection can become active.

• Some common symptoms of the active disease are a cough that lasts three weeks or longer, pain in the chest, coughing up blood or mucus, weakness or fatigue, loss of appetite, chills, fever and night sweats.

• The vaccine Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) is not recommende­d for the general population by the CDC, because it is of limited effectiven­ess and, given the low rate of TB in the United States, the drawbacks of vaccinatio­n can outweigh the benefits. It also can cause a false positive result on a TB skin test. The vaccine, however, is often given to infants and small children in other countries where tuberculos­is is common.

• Tuberculos­is can be detected by a blood test or a skin test. The skin test, which is generally less expensive though also less precise, is a two-part process: A small amount of a substance is injected under the skin, and then two to three days later the site is examined for a reaction.

WHO SHOULD BE TESTED

• People who have spent time with someone who has TB disease.

• People from a country where TB disease is common (most countries in Latin America, the Caribbean, Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, Russia).

• People who live or work in high-risk settings (correction­al facilities, long-term care facilities, homeless shelters).

• Health care workers whose patients are at increased risk for TB disease.

• Infants, children and adolescent­s exposed to adults who are at increased risk for latent tuberculos­is infection or TB disease.

FORMS OF TREATMENT

• A person who has latent infection is usually treated with the antibiotic isoniazid, a single daily pill for six to nine months.

• A person who has active tuberculos­is disease is treated with isoniazid and other antibiotic­s for six to 12 months.

• If the disease has become drug-resistant in a person, the course of treatment can be 20 to 30 months.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States