TB Skin Testing and Recommendation
The American College Health Association
(ACHA) recommend TB screening for high-risk students within 3-6 months
prior to or after college entrance.
Please check the web link for detailed information about ACHA screening:
The student health center is offering FREE TB skin testing to all registered students.
TB skin testing is administered:
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday for Fall and Spring Semester
Monday and Tuesday only for Summer Semester
Please call us for hours and
availability
Student will follow-up in 48-72 hours or
2-3 days for PPD skin test to be read.
No TB skin testing is given on Thursdays.
Potential Indications for TB 2-Step (Booster) Testing
TB 2-Step testing is
recommended by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) as a baseline test for
health care workers and other selected populations who have the possibility
of exposure to tuberculosis as part of their student or work experience. TB
2-Step testing is done in order to get an accurate baseline TB test prior to
contact with the public or patients that could have active TB.
If a person has had previous
unknown infection with tuberculosis and it has been more than a year since
their last TB test, it is possible for their TB test to read negative even
though they have been infected. This is due to the waning of the antibody
response after infection. However, receiving the TB test will stimulate the
antibodies and another test done shortly within a week or the first test
will demonstrate the TB infection by being read as positive or reactive.
About
the TB 2-Step (Booster) Test
The most common procedure
for TB 2-Step testing is to give the first Mantoux test (PPD) and have the test read in 48-72 hours or 2-3 days. If the test is
negative, repeat the PPD in one week and again have the repeat test read in
48-72 hours or 2-3 days. If the second PPD is negative, the baseline TB
2-Step test is negative and the student or staff is given annual PPD's as recommended by Chabot College program
requirements.
Positive Reactions to a PPD and its Implications
If you have a positive
PPD it does not mean that you have Tuberculosis. A positive PPD
means that your body's immune system recognizes the TB protein
injected into your arm and is mounting an antibody response. This is
why you have a raised red area at the site of injection. This
reaction shows that you have been exposed to the germ that causes
Tuberculosis. The exposure may be recent or may have occurred years
ago. A positive test may, but does not indicate the presence of
active Tuberculosis disease. Therefore, once you have had a positive
skin test, you should thereafter receive a chest X-ray, or health
clearance to demonstrate no active Tuberculosis.
Some people immunized in
countries with a high incidence of TB were given the BCG vaccine and may
test positive as a result. However, even with a history of BCG vaccination,
a positive test is still a positive test.
DO NOT HAVE ANY MORE
SKIN TESTS AFTER YOU HAVE TESTED POSITIVE (>10-15mm). Whether you
have an active disease or not, you will always test positive.
PLEASE NOTE: Students
who tested positive for their TB skin test at the student health center
will require a chest-xray clearance within two (2) weeks of the
TB skin test was read to demonstrate no active Tuberculosis. Failure to
provide chest-xray clearance will result on a temporary HOLD on student's registration.
What is Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis (TB) is a disease caused by bacteria called Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. The bacteria usually attack the lungs. But, TB bacteria can
attack any part of the body such as the kidney, spine, and brain. If not
treated properly, TB disease can be fatal. TB disease was once the leading
cause of death in the United States.
TB is spread through the air from one person to another. The bacteria are
put into the air when a person with active TB disease of the lungs or throat
coughs or sneezes. People nearby may breathe in these bacteria and become
infected.
However, not everyone infected with TB bacteria becomes sick. People who are
not sick have what is called latent TB infection. People who have latent TB
infection do not feel sick, do not have any symptoms, and cannot spread TB
to others. But, some people with latent TB infection go on to get TB
disease.
People with active TB disease can be treated if they seek medical help. Even
better, most people with latent TB infection can take medicine so that they
will not develop active TB disease.
What is latent TB infection?
In most people who breathe in TB bacteria and become infected, the body is
able to fight the bacteria to stop them from growing. The bacteria become
inactive, but they remain alive in the body and can become active later.
This is called latent TB infection. People with latent TB infection
- have no symptoms
- don't feel sick
- can't spread TB to others
- usually have a positive skin test reaction or QuantiFERON-TB Gold test
(QFT-G)
- may develop active TB disease if they do not receive treatment for latent
TB infection
Many people who have latent TB infection never develop active TB disease. In
these people, the TB bacteria remain inactive for a lifetime without causing
disease. But in other people, especially people who have weak immune
systems, the bacteria become active and cause TB disease.
What is active TB disease?
TB bacteria become active if the immune system can't stop them from growing.
The active bacteria begin to multiply in the body and cause active TB
disease. The bacteria attack the body and destroy tissue. If this occurs in
the lungs, the bacteria can actually create a hole in the lung. Some people
develop active TB disease soon after becoming infected, before their immune
system can fight the TB bacteria. Other people may get sick later, when
their immune system becomes weak for another reason.
Babies and young children often have weak immune systems. People infected
with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, have very weak immune systems. Other
people can have weak immune systems, too, especially people with any of
these conditions:
- substance abuse
- diabetes mellitus
- silicosis
- cancer of the head or neck
- leukemia or Hodgkin's disease
- severe kidney disease
- low body weight
- certain medical treatments (such as corticosteroid treatment or organ
transplants)
- specialized treatment for rheumatoid arthritis or Crohn’s disease
Symptoms of TB depend on where in the body the TB bacteria are growing. TB
bacteria usually grow in the lungs. TB in the lungs may cause symptoms such
as
- a bad cough that lasts 3 weeks or longer
- pain in the chest
- coughing up blood or sputum (phlegm from deep inside the lungs)
Other symptoms of active TB disease are
- weakness or fatigue
- weight loss
- no appetite
- chills
- fever
- sweating at night

The Difference Between Latent TB Infection
and Active TB Disease
| A Person
with Latent TB Infection |
A Person
with Active T B Disease |
| Has no symptoms |
Has symptoms that may include:
- a bad cough that lasts 3 weeks or longer
- pain in the chest
- coughing up blood or sputum
- weakness or fatigue
- weight loss
- no appetite
- chills
- fever
- sweating at night |
| Does not feel sick |
Usually feels sick |
| Cannot spread TB bacteria to
others |
May spread TB bacteria to others |
| Usually has a positive skin test
or QuantiFERON-TB® Gold test |
Usually has a positive skin test
or QuantiFERON-TB® Gold test |
| Has a normal chest x-ray and a
negative sputum smear |
May have an abnormal chest x-ray,
or positive sputum smear or culture |
| Needs treatment for latent TB infection to prevent active TB disease |
Needs treatment
to treat active TB disease
*Adopted from CDC
website:
http://www.cdc.gov/tb/faqs/default.htm
|
.