What are the symptoms of Tuberculosis?!


Question:

What are the symptoms of Tuberculosis?

What is the cause for Tuberculosis. How long after exposure can the doctor find out wether or not the patient is positive or negative? How the doctor will diagnos on a human generally. What are the symptoms and what causes Tuberculosis?


Answers:

Tuberculosis Symptoms
You may not notice any symptoms of illness until the disease is quite advanced. Even then the symptoms–loss of weight, loss of energy, poor appetite, fever, a productive cough, and night sweats–might easily be blamed on another disease.



Only about 10% of people infected with M tuberculosis ever develop tuberculosis disease. Many of those who suffer TB do so in the first few years following infection, but the bacillus may lie dormant in the body for decades.


Although most initial infections have no symptoms and people overcome them, they may develop fever, dry cough, and chest x-ray abnormalities.


This is called primary pulmonary tuberculosis.


Pulmonary tuberculosis frequently goes away by itself, but in 50-60% of cases the disease can return.


Tuberculous pleuritis may occur in 10% of people who have the lung disease from tuberculosis.


The pleural disease occurs from the rupture of a diseased area into the pleural space, the space between your lung and the lining of the abdominal cavity.


These people have a nonproductive cough, chest pain, and fever. The disease may go away and then come back at a later date.


In a minority of people with weakened immune systems, TB bacteria may spread through their blood to various parts of their body.


This is called miliary tuberculosis and produces fever, weakness, loss of appetite, and weight loss.


Cough and difficulty breathing are less common.


Generally, return of dormant tuberculosis infection occurs in the upper lungs.


Common cough with a progressive increase in production of mucus


Coughing up blood


Other symptoms include the following:


Fever


Loss of appetite


Weight loss


Night sweats


About 15% of people may develop tuberculosis in an organ other than their lungs. About 25% of these people usually had known TB with inadequate treatment. The most common sites include the following:


Lymph nodes


Genitourinary tract


Bone and joint sites


Meninges


The lining covering the outside of the gastrointestinal tract




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