ArabicChineseEnglishFrenchRussianSpanish
WHO home
  WHO > Health topics > Tuberculosis

Tuberculosis

Man behind chest X-ray

Tuberculosis, or TB, is an infectious bacterial disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which most commonly affects the lungs. It is transmitted from person to person via droplets from the throat and lungs of people with the active respiratory disease.

In healthy people, infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis often causes no symptoms, since the person's immune system acts to “wall off” the bacteria. The symptoms of active TB of the lung are coughing, sometimes with sputum or blood, chest pains, weakness, weight loss, fever and night sweats. Tuberculosis is treatable with a six-month course of antibiotics.


GENERAL

Fact sheet on tuberculosis

Q&A: what is TB? How does it spread?

MULTIMEDIA

orel tb hospital Russia
Successful fight against tuberculosis in south-western Russia

Features: tuberculosis

RELATED TOPICS

Gender and tuberculosis

Vaccines: tuberculosis

HIV/AIDS:tuberculosis

TECHNICAL

The Stop TB Strategy
Six-point WHO strategy building on the successes of DOTS

Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB)
News update and FAQs

Tuberculosis and HIV
FAQs, news, publications

- More about tuberculosis

PUBLICATIONS

Global tuberculosis control report 2008

Anti-tuberculosis drug resistance in the world [pdf 2.48Mb]

- More publications

STATISTICS

Data and country profiles

Global Health Atlas database


WHO PROGRAMMES AND ACTIVITIES

Stop TB Department
World TB Day

PARTNERS

Stop TB Partnership

TUBERCULOSIS IN WHO REGIONS

African Region
Region of the Americas
South-East Asian Region
European Region
Eastern Mediterranean Region
Western Pacific Region


WHO 60th anniversary logo
WHO 60th anniversary


KEY WHO INFORMATION

Director-General
Director-General and senior management

Governance of WHO
WHO Constitution, Executive Board and World Health Assembly

Media centre
News, events, fact sheets, multimedia and contacts

International travel and health
Publication on travel risks, precautions and vaccination requirements

World Health Report
Annual report on global public health and key statistics