Literature DB >> 23493008

Chest tuberculosis with mediastinal asymptomatic lymphadenitis without lung involvement in an immunocompetent patient.

Pietro Pirina1, Valentina Spada, Luigi Santoru, Maria Francesca Polo, Paola Molicotti, Vincenzo Marras, Paolo Cossu Rocca, Sara Canu, Stefania Zanetti, Alessandro Giuseppe Fois.   

Abstract

Tuberculosis remains the major cause of morbidity and mortality by a single infectious agent, particularly in developing countries. In recent years, we have witnessed the emergence of uncommon radiographic patterns of chest tuberculosis. Lymphadenitis is the most common extrapulmonary tuberculosis (TB) manifestation which, in developed countries, occurs more frequently in childhood, but also among adult immigrants from endemic countries and in HIV-infected people. Isolated and asymptomatic mediastinal lymphadenitis is uncommon in immunocompetent adults. We report a case of a young adult man from Senegal affected by sovraclavear and mediastinal TB lymphadenitis, which contains some uncommon elements: no compromised immunity, especially no HIV-infection, no lung lesions, no symptoms of infection or of mediastinum involvement, and rapid response to therapy in terms of mass size reduction. Examination of extra-thoracic lymph nodes and the patient's characteristics guided our diagnostic process to suspect TB. Surgical biopsy and subsequent histopathological and microbiological examinations of lymph material, first by Lowestein-Jensen and BACTEC cultures that remain the gold standard of diagnosis, confirmed the diagnosis. Chest X-ray was inconclusive; however, CT played an important role in the diagnostic course and in the management of the patient, particularly in determining disease activity, offering mediastinum and parenchymal details, as well as in identifying typical features of tuberculous lymph nodes and also of active/non active disease. Six months of antimycobacterial regimen is the recommended treatment in TB lymphadenitis of HIV-negative adults.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23493008     DOI: 10.3855/jidc.2973

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Infect Dev Ctries        ISSN: 1972-2680            Impact factor:   0.968


  2 in total

1.  Unusual clinical presentation of thoracic tuberculosis: the need for a better knowledge of illness.

Authors:  Sandra Manca; Alessandro Giuseppe Fois; Luigi Santoru; Rocco Trisolini; Maria Francesca Polo; Salvatore Ostera; Marco Patelli; Pietro Pirina
Journal:  Am J Case Rep       Date:  2015-04-24

2.  Combined transbronchoscopic needle aspiration (TBNA) and rapid on-site cytological evaluation (ROSE) for diagnosis of tuberculous mediastinal lymphadenitis: A case report.

Authors:  Xi Dai; Bin Niu; Xiao-Qiong Yang; Guo-Ping Li
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2018-09       Impact factor: 1.817

  2 in total

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