| Literature DB >> 25435964 |
Gao-Yi Yang1, Dan Zhao1, Wen-Zhi Zhang1, Jun Meng1, Jun Li1, Xiao-Hong Li2, Hai-Fang Wan3.
Abstract
Thyroid tuberculosis (TT) is an extremely rare condition, with acute abscess formation being the most uncommon form of presentation. Mycobacterium tuberculosis may affect the thyroid gland through hematogenous spread from an extra-thyroid focus of disease or by direct extension from adjacent cervical lymph nodes. Due to the non-specific imaging findings and the variable clinical manifestations, TT is rarely diagnosed promptly prior to percutaneous biopsy or surgery. The present study reports the dynamic monitoring of the sonographic features of a case with thyroid tuberculosis that was diagnosed by a thyroid ultrasound (US) scan, confirmed by a US-guided core-needle biopsy and followed-up sonographically during the whole course of treatment.Entities:
Keywords: thyroid tuberculosis; ultrasound; ultrasound-guided core-needle biopsy
Year: 2014 PMID: 25435964 PMCID: PMC4246641 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.2652
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1Thyroid tuberculosis in a 45-year-old patient. (A) Sonogram image revealing an ovoid-shaped, heterogeneous, hypoechoic nodule with ill-defined margins in the left thyroid lobe, resembling a cystic nodule with fluid space (white arrow). (B) Color Doppler examination revealing punctated and banded flow signals around the nodule.
Figure 2Repeat ultrasound examination at three days post-admission. (A) Longitudinal sonograms revealing a nodule, closely adjacent to the left salivary gland and partially protruding from the upper pole of capsular tissue into the left lobe of the thyroid. (B) A blood flow signal can be observed around the nodule. (C) Fine-needle aspiration cytology of the nodule. (D) The aspiration yielded reddish pus that was revealed to be red blood cells with necrosed materials. (E) Follicular epithelial cells on a bloody background, with clusters of purple-stained colloid and a field of red-stained granular caseous necrosis. (F) Multifocal granulomatous nodules inbetween atrophic thyroid follicules, with fibrous tissue proliferation and chronic inflammatory cell infiltration. (E anf F: stain, hematoxylin and eosin; magnification, ×200).
Figure 3Repeat ultrasound examination six months after the initiation of anti-tuberculosis medication. (A) Significant shrinkage and echo enhancements can be observed. The nodule is solid and well-defined, with two tiny calcifications inside (white arrows). (B) Color Doppler examination revealing punctate and strip-shaped blood flow around and inside the nodule.