The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

One teacher’s unexpected diagnosis

-

Brandpoint

At the beginning of the school year in 2014, Laura Hall, a Spanish teacher from a town on Lake Champlain in Vermont, began experienci­ng an unrelentin­g cough that continued for months. After countless doctor visits and multiple false diagnoses - everything from allergies to influenza - Laura had lost nearly 20 pounds. Frustrated, tired and ill, but knowing something was terribly wrong, Laura took matters into her own hands and checked herself into the ER.

In the ER, Laura was finally diagnosed correctly with active tuberculos­is, or TB. Without realizing it, she had been walking around with active TB for months, putting hundreds of students, colleagues, family and friends at risk of this airborne disease. According to Laura’s doctors, she most likely contracted TB while visiting family in Peru, though it is not clear how long the disease was living dormant in her body - meaning Laura may have been living with a latent TB infection (LTBI) for years, one that could have been treated long before it became active.

Many people consider TB a disease of the past, but it remains one of the most widespread, fatal infectious diseases worldwide, resulting in 1.3 million deaths a year. Approximat­ely onequarter of the world, including an estimated 13 million people in the U.S., are infected with LTBI, which has no symptoms and can progress to the highly contagious TB disease, particular­ly in those who are immunocomp­romised. Though only 10 percent of individual­s infected with LTBI will go on to develop active TB, prevention of this life-threatenin­g and contagious disease is essential. Given the silent symptoms of LTBI, people often aren’t diagnosed until it progresses to active disease.

Like most children who are born outside of the U.S., Laura was vaccinated for TB with the Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine as a child and was tested regularly throughout her career with the commonly used 100-year-old tuberculin skin test. However, the test never indicated Laura’s LTBI and she was never treated for it. If Laura had been accurately tested for LTBI, doctors may have been able to treat the infection before it progressed to the active, dangerous form of the disease.

Laura’s active TB forced her to be quarantine­d at home for months. Laura’s isolation and resulting panic in the community led to her constantly questionin­g, “Why did this happen to me?”

Today Laura does not want others to have the same experience, and she advocates for people to take control of their health by talking to their doctors about the risk factors of LTBI and about their testing options.

If you or a family member think you may be living with latent TB, talk to your doctor about getting tested for latent TB - and request the accurate TB blood test.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States