• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • About Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Sitemap

BDS Notes

BDS notes, Question and Answers

  • Public Health Dentistry
  • Periodontics
  • Pharmacology
  • Pathology
  • Orthodontics
    • Anchorage In Orthodontics
    • Mandibular Growth, Functional Matrix
    • Retention and Relapse
  • General Surgery
    • Cysts: Types, Causes, Symptoms
    • Maxillofacial Fractures, Disorders, and Treatments
    • Lymphatic Disorders
    • Neurological and Facial Disorders
  • Temporal And Infratemporal Regions
    • Spinal and Neuroanatomy
  • Dental Materials
    • Dental Amalgam
Home » RNTCP Classification of Tuberculosis: Drugs, Doses, and Regimens Explained

RNTCP Classification of Tuberculosis: Drugs, Doses, and Regimens Explained

August 20, 2025 by Marksparks .arkansas Leave a Comment

RNTCP Classification of Tuberculosis: Drugs, Doses, and Regimens Explained

Question. Write on the RNTCP classification of tuberculosis.

Answer. RNTCP or the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Program is the state­run tuberculosis control initiative of the Government of India. It incorporates the principles of directly observed treatment­short course (DOTS), the global TB control strategy of the World Health Organization.

The program provides, free of cost, quality anti­tubercular drugs across the country through the numerous Primary Health Centres and the growing number of private­sector DOTS­providers.

Objectives of pulmonary embolism.

  1. Detecting at least 70% of sputum-positive tuberculosis patients in the community.
  2. Curing at least 85% of the newly detected sputum-positive cases.

RNTCP classifies tuberculosis patients into the following treatment categories.

“Understanding RNTCP through FAQs: Classification, drugs, and regimens explained”

RNTCP classifis tuberculosis patients into following treatment

“Importance of studying RNTCP for healthcare professionals: Questions explained”

Explanation of standard code pulmonary embolism.

1. Each antitubercular drug has standard abbreviation, i.e.

  1. Isoniazid (H)
  2. Rifampicin (R)
  3. Pyrazinamide (Z)
  4. Ethambutol (E)
  5. Streptomycin (S)
  6. H: Isoniazid (300 mg), R: Rifampicin (450 mg),Z: Pyrazinamide (1500 mg), E: Ethambutol (1200 mg),S: Streptomycin (750 mg).

“Role of sputum testing in RNTCP classification of pulmonary TB: Questions answered”

2. Patients who weigh 60 kg or more receive additional Rifampicin 150 mg.

3. Patients who are more than 50 years old receive
Streptomycin 500 mg. Patients who weigh less than 30 kg
receive drugs as per pediatric weight band boxes according to body weight.

4. Numerical before a phase is the duration of that phase in months.

5. Numerical in subscript is the number of doses of that drug per week. If there is no subscript numerical, then the drug is given daily.

“Common challenges in implementing RNTCP guidelines effectively: FAQs provided”

Treatment regimen under rntcP for Mdr-tB (Multidrugresistant tB) and Xdr—tB (extensively drug resistant tB)

1. For MDR-TB:

  1. Six drugs in intensive phase for 6–9 months: Kanamycin,Levoflxacin, Ethionamide, Cycloserine, Pyrazinamide and Ethambutol.
  2. Four drugs in continuation phase for 18 months:
    Levofloxacin, Ethionamide, Cycloserine and Ethambutol.
  3. Reserve drug is p­aminosalicylic acid.

“Steps to explain RNTCP classification: Pulmonary vs extrapulmonary TB: Q&A guide”

2. For XDR—TB:

  1. Seven drugs in intensive phase for 6-12 months:Capreomycin, p-aminosalicylic acid, Moxiflxacin,high dose Isoniazid, Clofazimine, Linezolid,Amoxicillin and Clavulinic acid.
  2. Six drugs in continuation phase for 18 months: p­aminosalicylic acid, Moxifloxacin, high dose lsoniazid, Clofazimine, Linezolid, Amoxicillin and Clavulinic acid.
  3. Reserve drugs: Clarithromycin, Thiacetazone

Second-line antituberculous drugs

“Factors influencing success with RNTCP knowledge: Q&A”

Drug And Dose

Filed Under: General Medicine

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Branchial Cleft Cyst: Background, Pathophysiology, Etiology
  • Maxillary Nerve: Origin, Course, And Branches
  • The Father Of Anatomy And A Great Anatomist Herophilus
  • Bone Structure – Anatomy
  • The External Carotid Artery: Anatomy, Branches, And Functions
  • Occipitofrontalis Muscle
  • Superficial Temporal Artery
  • Platysma Muscle
  • Cartilage
  • Cauda Equina And Conus Medullaris Syndromes
  • Subcutaneous Injections And Device Management
  • Types Of Circulation: Pulmonary, Systemic, And Portal
  • Structure Of Skeletal Muscle
  • Elastic Cartilage
  • Cellular Organelles And Structure
  • The Golgi Apparatus – The Cell
  • The Cytoplasmic Inclusions Of Certain Plant Cells
  • Dental Abscess
  • Laser Surgery
  • Our Facial Muscles And Their Functions

Copyright © 2026 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in