Literature DB >> 16167493

[Peritoneal and intestinal tuberculosis: an ancestral disease that poses new challenges in the technological era. Case report and review of the literature].

Oscar Alejandro Farías Llamas1, María Karina Lizbeth López Ramírez, Juan Manuel Morales Amezcua, Manuel Medina Quintana, Giuseppe Buonocunto Vázquez, Isaac Emmanuel Ruiz Chávez, Alejandro González Ojeda.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Tuberculosis is a public health problem. The most common presentation is pulmonary disease. The diagnosis of any extrapulmonary forms are quite difficult. Clinical manifestations of gastrointestinal tuberculosis are non-specific and compatible with pathologies such as inflammatory bowel disease, advanced ovarian cancer, deep mycosis, yersinia infection and amebomas. Abdominal form is located at 6th place of the extrapulmonary forms, after lymphatic, genitourinary, osteoarticular, miliary and meningeal infections. Eventually, 25 to 75% of patients with abdominal tuberculosis will require surgery. These procedures should be limitated with the purpose to preserve small bowel. Resection should be limitated for complicated cases. The surgical indications include: Intestinal occlusion (15-60%), perforation (1-15%), abscesses and fistulas (2-30%) and hemorrhage (2%).
CONCLUSIONS: In most of the cases, the diagnosis of peritoneal or intestinal tuberculosis is made during a laparoscopy or laparotomy even during surgery performed by different purposes. Excessive manipulation of the intraabdominal organs may produced unexpected bowel lesions, increasing morbidity and mortality. Medical treatment is highly effective in the resolution of moderate complications such as bowel obstruction. Resectional procedures should be reserved for complications like perforation, bleeding or stenosis non-suitable for stricturoplasty.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16167493

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Gastroenterol Mex        ISSN: 0375-0906


  3 in total

1.  Tuberculosis in the peritoneum: not too rare after all.

Authors:  Michael Karanikas; Konstantinos Porpodis; Paul Zarogoulidis; Alexandros Mitrakas; Panagiotis Touzopoulos; Nikolaos Lyratzopoulos; George Kouklakis; Nikolaos Courcoutsakis; Alexandros Polychronidis
Journal:  Case Rep Gastroenterol       Date:  2012-06-19

2.  Abdominal pain in an adult with Type 2 diabetes: A case report.

Authors:  George Panagoulias; Nicholas Tentolouris; Spiros S Ladas
Journal:  Cases J       Date:  2008-09-17

3.  Abdominal tuberculosis mimicking Crohn's disease's exacerbation: A clinical, diagnostic and surgical dilemma. A case report.

Authors:  Davide Papis; Vittorio Branchi; Luis Gomez; Fernando Herrerias; Felip Vilardell; Marta Gonzalez; Jorge J Olsina
Journal:  Int J Surg Case Rep       Date:  2014-12-11
  3 in total

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