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1. Home
2. Health A to Z
3. Tuberculosis (TB)
Treatment-Tuberculosis (TB)
Contents
1. Overview
2. Symptoms
3. Causes
4. Diagnosis
5. Treatment
Treatment for tuberculosis (TB) usually involves taking antibiotics for several
months.
While TB is a serious condition that can be fatal if left untreated, deaths are rare if
treatment is completed.
Pulmonary TB
After taking antibiotics for 2 weeks, most people are no longer infectious and feel better.
Taking medication for 6 months is the best way to ensure the TB bacteria are killed.
If you stop taking your antibiotics before you complete the course or you skip a dose,
the TB infection may become resistant to the antibiotics.
This is potentially serious because it can be difficult to treat and will require a longer
course of treatment with different, and possibly more toxic, therapies.
If you find it difficult to take your medicine every day, your treatment team can work with
you to find a solution.
This may include having regular contact with your treatment team at home, at the
treatment clinic, or somewhere else that's more convenient.
If treatment is completed correctly, you should not need any further checks by a TB
specialist afterwards. You may be given advice about spotting signs that the illness has
returned, although this is rare.
Extrapulmonary TB
Extrapulmonary TB – TB that occurs outside the lungs – can be treated using the same
combination of antibiotics as those used to treat pulmonary TB.
If you have TB in areas like your brain or the sac surrounding your heart (pericardium),
you may initially be prescribed a corticosteroid such as prednisolone for several weeks
to take at the same time as your antibiotics. This will help reduce any swelling in the
affected areas.
As with pulmonary TB, it's important to take your medicines exactly as prescribed and to
finish the whole course.
Multidrug-resistant TB
Though uncommon in the UK there are strains of TB that are resistant to 2 or more
antibiotics. This is known as multidrug-resistant TB.
Latent TB
Latent TB is where you've been infected with the TB bacteria, but do not have any
symptoms of active infection.
If you have latent TB and are aged 65 or under, treatment is usually recommended.
However, the antibiotics used to treat TB can cause liver damage in older adults.
If liver damage is a concern and you're aged between 35 and 65, your TB team will
discuss with you the advantages and disadvantages of taking treatment for latent TB.
Latent TB is also not always treated if it's thought to be drug resistant. If this is the case,
you may be regularly monitored to check the infection does not become active.
In some cases, testing and treatment for latent TB may be recommended for people
who require treatment that will weaken their immune system, such as long-term steroid
medicines, chemotherapy or biological inhibitors like TNF inhibitors. This is because
there's a risk of the infection becoming active.
In rare cases, the antibiotics used to treat TB can cause eye damage, which can be
serious. If you're going to be treated with ethambutol, your sight should also be tested at
the beginning of the course of treatment.
Contact your TB treatment team if you develop any worrying symptoms during
treatment, such as:
being sick
yellowing of your skin and the whites of your eyes (jaundice)
an unexplained high temperature
tingling or numbness in your hands or feet
a rash or itchy skin
changes to your sight, such as blurred vision
Rifampicin can reduce the effectiveness of some types of contraception, such as
the combined contraceptive pill. You should use an alternative method of contraception,
such as condoms, while taking rifampicin.
Rifampicin can also interact with other medication, so it's important that your TB team
know about all of the medicine you're taking before you start treatment for TB.
You should:
stay away from work, school or college until your TB treatment team advises you it's safe
to return
always cover your mouth – preferably with a disposable tissue – when coughing,
sneezing or laughing
carefully dispose of any used tissues in a sealed plastic bag
open windows when possible to ensure a good supply of fresh air in the areas where
you spend time
not sleep in the same room as other people – you could cough or sneeze in your sleep
without realising it
What if someone I know has TB?
When someone is diagnosed with TB, their treatment team will assess whether other
people are at risk of infection.
This may include close contacts, such as people living with the person who has TB, as
well as casual contacts, such as work colleagues and social contacts.
Anyone who's thought to be at risk will be asked to go for testing, and will be given
advice and any necessary treatment after their results.
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