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Talking with Your Patients about Latent Tuberculosis (TB) Infection Testing and treating latent TB infection is a critical step to eliminating TB disease in the United States and protecting your community As a trusted source of health information in your community, it’s important to initiate a conversation about latent TB infection and TB disease with your patients since there may be a lack of awareness about or stigma associated with these conditions Here
Treatment for Latent Tuberculosis Infection | Tuberculosis (TB) | CDC People with latent tuberculosis (TB) infection can be treated to prevent TB disease CDC and the National Tuberculosis Coalition of America preferentially recommend short-course, rifamycin-based, 3- or 4-month latent TB infection treatment regimens
Clinical Treatment of Tuberculosis | Tuberculosis (TB) | CDC Both latent tuberculosis (TB) infection and TB disease can be treated Several treatment regimens for patients with latent TB infection or TB disease are available Contact your state or local TB program or TB Centers of Excellence for Training, Education, and Medical Consultation for assistance treating people with TB
About Inactive Tuberculosis | Tuberculosis (TB) | CDC Tuberculosis (TB) germs can live in the body for years without making you sick This is called inactive TB or latent TB infection People with inactive TB do not feel sick, do not have symptoms, and cannot spread TB germs to others Without treatment, inactive TB can develop into active TB disease at any time and make you sick
2021 State and City TB Report: Treatment for Latent TB Infection Latent TB infection can be treated to prevent the risk of progression to TB disease Thus, it is important, in terms of accelerating the decline in TB incidence, to measure how many people with latent TB infection are identified through targeted testing, begin treatment, and complete treatment
Latent Syphilis - STI Treatment Guidelines Latent syphilis is defined as syphilis characterized by seroreactivity without other evidence of primary, secondary, or tertiary disease Persons who have latent syphilis and who acquired syphilis during the preceding year are classified as having early latent syphilis (early nonprimary, nonsecondary)