This happened to me several months ago, I'm a nurse and work in home health and one of my fellow nurses gave me the test. I was so mad because she acted so confident and apparently had been doing the test all day. She gave me an ugly glare when I mentioned the need for alcohol (seriously!). I should have spoken up more considering I'm a nurse but I had been completely shocked when she shoved the needle into the muscle in my forearm and dispersed the entire syringe!! I just couldn't believe it. She than said it will be fine we will check it in 48 hrs. I was so shocked that stupidly I didn't report it, held my arm in disbelief and left. Lucky I haven't seen any side effects, I'm still upset and concerned on any long term effects.
hi brenda! can you tell me what happen to you brother's arm a week after? Got the same problem but my arm have a BIG bump now. Dont know what to to do with the swelling. its really big. they injected 1ml in my skin!
Thank you Corvin! He was pretty upset when he called me, and this got me upset. I will pass this information on to him when he calls me Sunday.
Hi Brenda,
As far as I'm aware the antigens in the Mantoux (PPD) test are killed, they're not live. I believe they use dead fragments of M. Tuberculosis in the PPD test. So the worst that would happen is he could get a really swollen shoulder were it was injected, but that would only happen if his immune system recognizes the TB fragments, which would only happen if he has ever had an active infection of bacteria in the Mycobacterium family, mainly Mycobacterium Tuberculosis. If he has a reaction it would be with in 48-72hrs after the injection, but either way it's harmless, and won't cause an infection of TB.
If it happened to be an overdose of a BCG vaccine that could be another story though, but BCG isn't used in the United States, because we have such a low occurence of TB, they figure mass inoculation is more dangerous than the risk of catching TB.