| Literature DB >> 23514625 |
Scott K Heysell1, Tania A Thomas, Costi D Sifri, Patrice K Rehm, Eric R Houpt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) is increasingly used to investigate for malignancy in the evaluation of pulmonary nodules, yet both active tuberculosis (TB) and malignancy have high uptake of FDG. Definitive diagnosis of TB can be further hindered in patients without growth of the organism from sputum. CASE PRESENTATIONS: We describe a series of four representative cases of TB in varying disease state originally imaged by FDG-PET during evaluation for malignancy. Decisions regarding treatment for active TB in the presence of negative cultures and the evolving understanding of the spectrum of the TB disease state are discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23514625 PMCID: PMC3637578 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2466-13-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Figure 1Representative FDG-PET/CT images. A. Case 1: axial CT (left) and fused FDG-PET/CT, with abnormal FDG uptake in the mediastinal lymph nodes. B. Case 2: fused FDG-PET/CT highlighting abnormal uptake in the right upper lobe nodule and more intense uptake in mediastinal lymph nodes. C. Case 3: axial CT (left) and fused FDG-PET/CT (right) with abnormal uptake in the right upper lobe nodule.
Figure 2Spectrum of tuberculosis infection with proposed relationship to FDG-PET findings. Following exposure to M. tuberculosis an unknown percentage will clear infection entirely, while the vast majority develop latency (adapted from [10], [11]). Treatment of TB may eradicate all bacteria or leave a small population in a dormant non-replicating state. Populations with occasional replication termed “percolating” can be held under immunological control (noted by the dotted line) [10], [11]. Yet as bacterial burden increases, the risk of progression to active infection increases (noted by the hashed line). Cases 1–4 are presumptively placed along the proposed spectrum based on clinical, histopathological and microbiological studies and 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) avidity.