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  2. There are several treatment regimens recommended in the United States for TB disease. TB treatment can take 4, 6, or 9 months depending on the regimen. TB treatment regimens include. Interim Guidance: 4-Month Rifapentine-Moxifloxacin Regimen for the Treatment of Drug-Susceptible Pulmonary Tuberculosis — United States, 2022.

  3. Treatment for inactive TB can take three, four, six, or nine months depending on the treatment plan. The treatment plans for inactive TB use different combinations of medicines that may include: Isoniazid. Rifampin. Rifapentine. Keep Reading: Treating Inactive Tuberculosis.

  4. The tuberculosis (TB) blood test and the TB skin test are the two types of tests for TB infection. Treatment Both inactive tuberculosis (TB) and active TB disease can be treated.

  5. Treating Active Tuberculosis Disease | Tuberculosis (TB) | CDC

    www.cdc.gov/tb/treatment/active-tuberculosis-disease.html

    Your health care provider will make sure the medications can kill the TB germs in your body. Treatment for active TB disease can take four, six, or nine months depending on the treatment plan. The treatment plans for active TB disease use different combinations of medicines that may include: Ethambutol. Isoniazid.

  6. Treatment for Latent TB Infection and TB Disease | TB | CDC

    www.cdc.gov/tb/topic/treatment/default.htm

    Treatment for Latent TB Infection and TB Disease. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has issued a public statement related to nitrosamines impurities in rifampin and rifapentine, two important anti-tuberculosis (TB) medications. People with TB disease or latent TB infection taking rifampin or rifapentine should continue taking their current ...

  7. Diagnosis of Tuberculosis in Children and Adults Clinical Infectious Disease 2017. Executive Summary. Full Guidelines. 2017. Availability of an Assay for Detecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Including Rifampin-Resistant Strains, and Considerations for Its Use — United States, 2013. MMWR 2013; 62 (No. 41) 2013.

  8. Causes. Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by a bacterium (or germ) called Mycobacterium tuberculosis. When a person breathes in TB germs, the germs can settle in the lungs and begin to grow. From there, they can move through the blood to other parts of the body, such as the kidney, spine, and brain. TB bacteria can live in the body without making you ...

  9. People with inactive tuberculosis (TB), also called latent TB infection, can take treatment to prevent the development of active TB disease. People with active TB disease of the lungs or throat may need to take steps to prevent spreading TB germs to others. It is important for people to take all TB medicine exactly as prescribed.

  10. Treating Inactive Tuberculosis | Tuberculosis (TB) | CDC

    www.cdc.gov/tb/treatment/treatment-for-inactive-tuberculosis.html

    If you have inactive tuberculosis (TB), also called latent TB infection, treating it is the best way to protect you from getting sick with active TB disease. Treatment for inactive TB can take three, four, six, or nine months depending on the treatment plan. Talk to your health care provider about which treatment is best for you.

  11. Tuberculosis (TB) is an airborne disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis). M. tuberculosis and seven very closely related mycobacterial species (M. bovis, M. africanum, M. microti, M. caprae, M. pinnipedii, M. canetti, and M. mungi) comprise what is known as the M. tuberculosis complex.