| Literature DB >> 26180746 |
Yu-Feng Wu1, Cheng-Maw Ho1, Chang-Tsu Yuan2, Chiung-Nien Chen1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Tuberculosis is known as a notorious mimicker and distinguishing between intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn's disease is a huge diagnostic challenge. CASE DESCRIPTION: Here, we report a case of hollow organ perforation due to intestinal tuberculosis that was previously mistreated as Crohn's disease. Staged operation with emergency resection of the diseased small bowel and temporary ileostomy was performed for the perforation, followed by 6-month standard treatment for miliary tuberculosis, which was diagnosed on the basis of the presence of acid-fast bacilli in the diseased bowel and positive culture of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from sputum, ascites, and stool samples. Ileostomy takedown was performed, and the continuity of the gastrointestinal tract was restored 6 months after the first surgery. The patient recovered well thereafter.Entities:
Keywords: Bowel perforation; Crohn’s disease; Intestinal tuberculosis
Year: 2015 PMID: 26180746 PMCID: PMC4493258 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-015-1129-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Figure 1Image studies of the patient with intestinal tuberculosis initially misdiagnosed as Crohn’s disease. a–c Images for making the initial diagnosis of Crohn’s disease. a Coronal view of abdominal computed tomography showed skip lesions with interrupted dilatation of the small bowel, and one stricture point at the terminal ileum with the dilated proximal intestine (arrow); b Initial barium radiographic study of the intestine showed segmental narrowing of the ileum, which favored post-inflammatory focal stricture (arrow); c Colonoscopic examination showed polypoid lesion at the terminal ileum. d D1 Barium radiographic study of our patient after completion of anti-tuberculous treatment showing patent intestinal structure; D2 Barium radiographic study of another 20-year-old male diagnosed with Crohn’s disease showing typical ileocecal valve involvement with cobblestone appearance.
Figure 2Histopathological examination of the surgical specimen. a The presence of acid-fast bacilli in the bowel (acid-fast stain); b granulomatous inflammation with caseating necrosis (H&E stain).
Distinguishing features between intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn’s disease [3–5]
| Intestinal tuberculosis | Crohn’s disease | |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical presentations | ||
| Age | Any age | 20–50 |
| Obstructive symptoms | ++ | + |
| Stricture pattern | Short, single | Long, multiple (skip lesions) |
| Mucosal ulceration | Circumferential | Longitudinal |
| Fistula | Few | 35–50% |
| Perianal disease | Few | >1/3 |
| Ascites | + | Rare |
| Histological features | ||
| Caseous necrosis | 22–40% | 0% |
| Granulomatous inflammation | 78–100% | 28–61% |
| Confluent granuloma | 42–60% | 0–3% |
| ≧5 granulomas/biopsy | 40–45% | 0–24% |
| Large granulomasa | 51–90% | 0–5% |
| Submucosal granulomas | 39–45% | 5–12% |
| Ulcers lined by bands of epithelioid histiocytes | 45–61% | 0–8% |
| Disproportionate submucosal inflammation | 65–67% | 5–10% |
aLarge granuloma: [3]: area > 0.05 mm2; [4]: diameter > 400 μm; [5]: diameter > 200 μm.