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What is tuberculosis?
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   Last updated: 16.02.06
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  • A disease of the past?
A disease of the past?
Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by a very small bacterium called Mycobacterium tuberculosis and has been causing illness and death in people for thousands of years. Symptoms of TB include cough, fever, night sweats, and rapid weight loss – the disease used to be called "consumption" because of this. TB is still one of the leading causes of death worldwide, mainly affecting the poor, the very young and old, and people who had been weakened by other diseases or by not having enough to eat.

The number of cases of TB fell dramatically in countries like the UK thanks to improved standards of living, better general health, effective anti-TB drugs, and TB vaccination programmes. In fact, progress against the disease was so successful that, by the 1980s, many countries, such as the UK and USA became confident that they could eradicate TB.

However, since then the number of cases of TB has increased worldwide, partly because of HIV. TB and HIV are seen as the major threats to world health in the 21st century.

TB is an AIDS-defining illness. Worldwide, TB is now the leading cause of death among people with HIV and is the most common AIDS-defining illness in the UK.




 

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Booklets
HIV & TB
  • Introduction
  • What is tuberculosis?
  • TB - the basics
  • Transmission
  • TB’s interaction with HIV
  • Symptoms
  • Diagnosing TB
  • Preventing TB
  • Treating TB
  • Multidrug-resistant TB
  • Immune reconstitution syndrome
  • Summary


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