Pulmonary Tuberculosis (TB) : Causes
Pulmonary Tuberculosis (TB) : Causes
Pulmonary Tuberculosis (TB) : Causes
Is a contagious bacterial infection that mainly involves the lungs, but may spread to other
organs.
Causes
Most people who develop symptoms of a TB infection first became infected in the past.
However, in some cases, the disease may become active within weeks after the primary
infection.
Elderly
Infants
People with weakened immune systems, for example due to AIDS, chemotherapy,
or antirejection medicines given after an organ transplant
Symptoms
The primary stage of the disease usually doesn't cause symptoms. When symptoms of
pulmonary TB occur, they may include:
Breathing difficulty
Chest pain
Wheezing
The classification of TB is based on the client’s history, physical examination, skin test,
chest x- ray, and microbiologic test. The American Thoracic Society classifies tuberculosis in a
systematic way to monitor the epidiomology and treatment. The classification is as follows:
TB is characterized by stages of early infection (or primary TB), latency, and potential
for recurrence after the primary disease (called secondary TB). The bacilli may remain dormant
for many years and then reactive, producing clinical symptoms of TB.
Treatment
The goal of treatment is to cure the infection with drugs that fight the TB bacteria.
Treatment of active pulmonary TB will always involve a combination of many drugs (usually
four drugs). All of the drugs are continued until lab tests show which medicines work best.
Isonizid
Rifampin
Pyrazinamide
Ethambutol
Amikacin
Ethionamide
Moxifloxacin
Para-aminosalicylic acid
Streptomycin
You may need to take many different pills at different times of the day for 1 year or
longer. It is very important that you take the pills the way your health care provider instructed.
When people do not take their tuberculosis medications as recommended, the infection
becomes much more difficult to treat. The TB bacteria may become resistant to treatment, and
sometimes, the drugs no longer help treat the infection.
When there is a concern that a patient may not take all the medication as directed, a
health care provider may need to watch the person take the prescribed drugs. This is called
directly observed therapy. In this case, drugs may be given 2 or 3 times per week, as prescribed
by a doctor.
You may need to be admitted to a hospital for 2 - 4 weeks to avoid spreading the disease
to others until you are no longer contagious.
Your doctor or nurse is required by law to report your TB illness to the local health
department. Your health care team will be sure that you receive the best care for your TB.
Outlook (Prognosis)
Symptoms may improve in 2 - 3 weeks. A chest x-ray will not show this improvement
until later. The outlook is excellent if pulmonary TB is diagnosed early and treatment is begun
quickly.
Possible Complications
Changes in vision
Orange- or brown-colored tears and urine
Rash
A vision test may be done before treatment so your doctor can monitor any changes in
your eyes' health over time.
Prevention
TB is a preventable disease, even in those who have been exposed to an infected person.
Skin testing (PPD) for TB is used in high risk populations or in people who may have been
exposed to TB, such as health care workers.
A positive skin test indicates TB exposure and an inactive infection. Discuss preventive
therapy with your doctor. People who have been exposed to TB should be skin tested
immediately and have a follow-up test at a later date, if the first test is negative.
Prompt treatment is extremely important in controlling the spread of TB from those who
have active TB disease to those who have never been infected with TB.
Some countries with a high incidence of TB give people a BCG vaccination to prevent
TB. However, the effectiveness of this vaccine is controversial and it is not routinely used in the
United States.
People who have had BCG may still be skin tested for TB. Discuss the test results (if
positive) with your doctor.