Tatiana Lachi1, Mauro Nakayama2. 1. Master, MD, Radiologist, Hospital Regional de Mato Grosso do Sul, Auxiliary Professor at Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul (UFMS), Campo Grande, MS, Brazil. 2. PhD, Associate Professor at Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados (UFGD), Dourados, MS, Brazil.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the radiological findings of pulmonary tuberculosis in indigenous patients from the city of Dourados, MS, Brazil, according to age and sex. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Chest radiographic images of 81 patients with pulmonary tuberculosis, acquired in the period from 2007 to 2010, were retrospectively analyzed by two radiologists in consensus for the presence or absence of changes. The findings in abnormal radiographs were classified according to the changes observed and they were correlated to age and sex. The data were submitted to statistical analysis. RESULTS: The individuals' ages ranged from 1 to 97 years (mean: 36 years). Heterogeneous consolidations, nodules, pleural involvement and cavities were the most frequent imaging findings. Most patients (55/81 or 67.9%) were male, and upper lung and right lung were the most affected regions. Fibrosis, heterogeneous consolidations and involvement of the left lung apex were significantly more frequent in males (p < 0.05). Presence of a single type of finding at radiography was most frequent in children (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Based on the hypothesis that indigenous patients represent a population without genetically determined resistance to tuberculosis, the present study may enhance the knowledge about how the pulmonary form of this disease manifests in susceptible individuals.
OBJECTIVE: To describe the radiological findings of pulmonary tuberculosis in indigenous patients from the city of Dourados, MS, Brazil, according to age and sex. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Chest radiographic images of 81 patients with pulmonary tuberculosis, acquired in the period from 2007 to 2010, were retrospectively analyzed by two radiologists in consensus for the presence or absence of changes. The findings in abnormal radiographs were classified according to the changes observed and they were correlated to age and sex. The data were submitted to statistical analysis. RESULTS: The individuals' ages ranged from 1 to 97 years (mean: 36 years). Heterogeneous consolidations, nodules, pleural involvement and cavities were the most frequent imaging findings. Most patients (55/81 or 67.9%) were male, and upper lung and right lung were the most affected regions. Fibrosis, heterogeneous consolidations and involvement of the left lung apex were significantly more frequent in males (p < 0.05). Presence of a single type of finding at radiography was most frequent in children (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Based on the hypothesis that indigenous patients represent a population without genetically determined resistance to tuberculosis, the present study may enhance the knowledge about how the pulmonary form of this disease manifests in susceptible individuals.
Tuberculosis is one of the three leading causes of death by infectious disease in adult
individuals worldwide(, which
represents about two million deaths and involvement of approximately eight million
people around the world per year(.
About 50% of the individuals who are not treated die because of the disease(. The infection by the bacillus
responsible for the tuberculosis - Mycobacterium tuberculosis - is the
most common of the humaninfections(
and may be found in about one third of the world population(. According to the World Health Organization, from 5% to
10% of the infected individuals develop tuberculosis along their lives(. Approximately 85% of cases of
tuberculosis affect the lung parenchyma(.In the United States of America and in Western countries, in the 1950's, the rates of
infection and death by tuberculosis decreased significantly with the development of
appropriate antibiotics. Since the middle of the 1980's, the acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome has led to an increase in the number of new cases of tuberculosis in Europe,
United States of America and particularly in Africa(. Other causes attributed to such an increase include worsening of
public health services, the high correlation between the disease and poverty, and the
increased resistance of bacilli to anti-tuberculosis drugs.The Brazilian indigenous populations are particularly susceptible to tuberculosis due to
different reasons including low socioeconomic conditions, difficulty in accessing health
services and immunological peculiarities(.Therefore, it is important that the disease is discovered early. Chest radiography plays
a fundamental role in the diagnosis(, since it can be rapidly performed,
facilitating an early diagnosis (in a screening program, it can shorten the time to
diagnosis from 25 to 6 days), potentially reducing the infection transmission and onset
of secondary cases. Chest radiography is the imaging method of choice for initial
evaluation of the patient and also for the disease management(. The posteroanterior view is sufficient for screening,
even in pediatric patients, with a positive tuberculin test(.Chest radiography is even more important for the diagnosis of tuberculosis in children.
The paucibacillary condition of the disease at the pediatric age requires clinical,
radiological and epidemiological criteria for the diagnosis in these patients(.The present study is aimed at describing the radiological findings of pulmonary
tuberculosis in indigenous patients of Dourados, state of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil,
distributed according to age and sex. Few studies are found in the literature about
alterations in pulmonary imaging patterns caused by tuberculosis in indigenous
individuals. Additionally, considering the hypothesis that such individuals represent a
population that could not yet be genetically selected for resistance to the disease, the
present study may enhance the knowledge about the way pulmonary tuberculosis manifests
itself in susceptible individuals.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The present study was approved by the Committee for Ethics in Research of Universidade
Federal da Grande Dourados and was developed according to the rules for use of
information contained in patients records provided on items III.3.i and III.3.t of the
Brazilian Resolution CNS 196/96. The term of free and informed consent was not
necessary. The present study is also in accordance with the ethical standards of the
World Medical Association (Declaration of Helsinki).This is a descriptive, quantitative and retrospective study utilizing secondary data
from radiographic images and information contained in records of indigenous patients
treated for pulmonary tuberculosis in a hospital of the city of Dourados, state of Mato
Grosso do Sul, Brazil.
Study population
The study subjects were indigenous patients of the ethnic groups Kaiowá,
Guarani and Terena, besides other indigenous patients whose ethnic origin could not
be identified due lack of information. All those patients underwent treatment for
pulmonary tuberculosis in the hospital in the period from 2007 to 2010. Patients
included in the study were those treated for the disease and with chest radiography
performed before or during the treatment, in a total of 81 patients (81
radiographs).Most radiographic images (56/81) were acquired before the treatment and 25/81 during
the treatment, as follows: 11/81, 5/81, 4/81, 2/81, 2/81 and 1/81 about five months,
fifteen days, one, two, three and four months, respectively, after treatment
initiation. Other group of ten patients had radiographic images acquired after the
treatment (from two months to three years after their treatment) and the imaging
results are described as disease sequelae in an item separately in the results
section. The patients whose radiographs could not be analyzed due to unsatisfactory
image quality were excluded from the study.
Data collection instrument
The data were collected by means of forms prepared by the authors, containing
information on age, sex, ethnic origin, laboratory tests results and radiographic
findings of the study population. The radiographic images were analyzed as for
absence or presence of findings. The abnormal radiographs were analyzed according the
findings, as follows: homogeneous or heterogeneous consolidations; presence or
absence of excavations, calcifications, fibrosis, atelectasis, nodules, micronodules,
lymph node enlargement, or pleural involvement. Also the number and location of the
affected pulmonary areas were analyzed. The radiographic images were submitted to
consensual analysis by two experienced radiologist (10- and 15-year experience in the
field).
Data analysis
A descriptive statistical analysis was made and mean and standard deviation
calculations were included in the study. The chi-square and exact Fisher's tests were
utilized to correlate the radiological findings with age and sex. The
softwares utilized were Excel 2007 and SPSS version 19 for a
significance level = 5%.
RESULTS
Several imaging findings were observed in the present study. Figures 1 and 2 demonstrate
the most frequent pulmonary alteration found in the study population, namely,
heterogeneous consolidations. On the other hand, Figure
3 represents a nodule, while Figure 4
shows micronodules, the latter related to more severe disease. Figures 5 and 6 show bilateral
superior hilar retraction and excavations, while an image representing a pulmonary
tuberculosis sequela, linear density, can be seen on Figure 7.
Figure 1
A 31-year-old man with heterogeneous and homogeneous, parahilar, bilateral
pulmonary consolidations.
Figure 2
A 41-year-old man with heterogeneous (bold arrow) and homogeneous (dashed arrow)
pulmonary consolidations in the left and right hemithoraces, respectively.
Figure 3
A 47-year-old man with a nodule (arrow) in the right lung.
Figure 4
Chest radiography of a 14-year-old young girl showing the presence of pulmonary
micronodules.
Figure 5
A 45-year-old man with (A) bilateral, superior pulmonary hilar
retraction and (B) pulmonary excavations (arrows) without fluid level
in the left hemithorax.
Figure 6
A 48-year-old man with pulmonary excavation (bold arrow) with fluid level (dashed
arrows) – an uncommon finding – in the left lung.
Figure 7
A 32-year-old man with linear density in the right lung apex (arrow). This
radiographic image was acquired two years after a successful treatment for
pulmonary tuberculosis.
A 31-year-old man with heterogeneous and homogeneous, parahilar, bilateral
pulmonary consolidations.A 41-year-old man with heterogeneous (bold arrow) and homogeneous (dashed arrow)
pulmonary consolidations in the left and right hemithoraces, respectively.A 47-year-old man with a nodule (arrow) in the right lung.Chest radiography of a 14-year-old young girl showing the presence of pulmonary
micronodules.A 45-year-old man with (A) bilateral, superior pulmonary hilar
retraction and (B) pulmonary excavations (arrows) without fluid level
in the left hemithorax.A 48-year-old man with pulmonary excavation (bold arrow) with fluid level (dashed
arrows) – an uncommon finding – in the left lung.A 32-year-old man with linear density in the right lung apex (arrow). This
radiographic image was acquired two years after a successful treatment for
pulmonary tuberculosis.
Distribution of patients according to age, sex, ethnic origin and radiological
findings
The patients' distribution according to age and sex is shown on Table 1. Most individuals (72/81 or 88.9%) were
treated on an outpatient basis. Only 9/81 (11.1%) patients were admitted to the
hospital for more than 30 days.
Table 1
Patients' distribution according to age and sex - Dourados, MS, Brazil,
2010.
Age (years)
Number of patients
Percentage
≤ 9
7
8.6%
10-19
7
8.6%
20-29
20
24.7%
30-39
20
24.7%
40-49
11
13.6%
50-59
4
4.9%
≥ 60
12
14.8%
Sex
Male
55
67.9%
Female
26
32.1%
Patients' distribution according to age and sex - Dourados, MS, Brazil,
2010.The patients' mean age was 36 years (standard deviation: 21.5 years). Among the male
patients, the mean age was 38.49 years (standard deviation: 20.85 years), ranging
between 1 and 97 years. Among the female patients, the mean age was 30.62 years
(standard deviation 22.22 years), ranging between 1 and 76 years.The Kaiowá ethnic group represented the majority of patients, with 53/81
(65.4%) individuals, followed by the Guarani and Terena ethnic groups, with 14/81
(17.3%) and 7/81 (8.6%) individuals, respectively. Information about the ethnic
origin of 7/81 (8.6%) patients was not available.Abnormal radiographic images were found in 79/81 (97.5%) cases. Most patients (50/81
or 61.7%) presented three or more pulmonary areas affected by tuberculosis. Such a
disease extent was present in 32/55 (58.2%) men and in 18/26 (69.2%) women. Only
12/81 (14.8%) patients presented only one pulmonary area affected by the disease.Table 2 shows that the upper pulmonary areas
as well as the right lung were most affected.
Table 2
Distribution of the affected lung areas - Dourados, MS, Brazil, 2010.
Affected lung areas
Number of patients
Percentage
Right apex
54
66.7%
Left apex
50
61.7%
Right middle third
50
61.7%
Left middle third
47
58.0%
Right lower third
39
48.1%
Left lower third
24
29.6%
Distribution of the affected lung areas - Dourados, MS, Brazil, 2010.The frequencies of each radiological finding are shown on Table 3. As previously mentioned, one can notice that
heterogeneous consolidations were the most frequent findings in the present
study.
Table 3
Frequency of radiological findings - Dourados, MS, Brazil, 2010.
Radiological findings
Number of patients
Percentage
Heterogeneous consolidations
69
85.2%
Nodules
38
46.9%
Pleural involvement
32
39.5%
Excavations
18
22.2%
Micronodules
13
16.0%
Fibrosis
13
16.0%
Homogeneous consolidations
12
14.8%
Lymph nodes involvement
7
8.6%
Linear densities
4
4.9%
Atelectasis
3
3.7%
Calcifications
2
2.5%
Frequency of radiological findings - Dourados, MS, Brazil, 2010.Correlation between sex and frequency of findings was observed as follows: a)
fibrosis, present in 12/55 (21.8%) men and in 1/26 (3.8%) women (p =
0.04); b) heterogeneous consolidations, present in 51/55 (92.7%) men and in 18/26
(69.2%) women (p = 0.015); c) involvement of the left lung apex,
present in 38/55 (69.1%) men and in 12/26 (46.2%) women (p = 0.047).
No statistical difference was observed between male and female patients
(p > 0.5) as regards frequency of other types of radiographic
findings, likewise as regards frequency of involvement of the different pulmonary
areas (except for left lung apex, as already described), frequency of abnormal
radiographic images or presence of only one type of radiographic finding.The presence of only one type of radiographic finding was observed in 20/81 (24.7%)
patients and was significantly associated with the patient's age range, as follows:
present in 5/7 (71.4%) children aged ≤ 9 years, in 1/7 (14.3%) adolescents
between 10 and 19 years, and in 14/67 (20.9%) adult individuals aged ≥ 20
years. The frequency was higher in children as compared with adolescents
(p = 0.031) and adults (p = 0.004), but no
difference was observed in frequency as adolescents were compared with adults
(p = 0.679). No statistically significant difference was observed
between the three age ranges - children ≤ 9 years, adolescents between 10 and
19 years, and adults ≥ 20 years - as regards frequency of the different types
of radiographic findings, frequency of involvement of different pulmonary areas, or
frequency of abnormal radiographic images.Most patients presenting with radiographic findings - 59/79 (74.7%) - had more than
one type of finding, regardless the number of affected pulmonary areas.Figures 3 to 6 show some of the radiographic findings observed in the patients of the
present study. The point to be highlighted is the severity observed at the
radiographic images presenting a great extent of the affected areas and severity of
the findings such as presence of diffuse micronodules (Figure 4).None of the children presented with lymph node involvement, which was found in 7/81
(8.6%) adult patients in the age range between 27 and 76 years. Similarly,
atelectasis was present only in adults - 3/81 (3.7%) patients aged 35, 56 and 89
years.In the present study, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) serology was negative in
54/81 (66.7%) patients. In 13/81 (16.0%) and 5/81 (6.2%) individuals such a test had
not been performed or was being made, respectively. No information was available
about HIV serology in 9/81 (11.1%) patients. As only adults were considered, most of
them were HIV-negative - 52/67 (77.6%). Most children (5/7 or 71.4%) and adolescents
(4/7 or 57.1%) were not tested for HIV. Among those who were tested for HIV, 2/7
(28.6%) children and 3/7 (42.9%) adolescents had negative results.
Pulmonary tuberculosis sequelae at radiographs
A total of 10 patients had radiographs performed at least two months after the
treatment, as follows: a 33-year-old woman and 9 adult men in the age range between
24 and 81 years (mean age = 38.67 years, standard deviation 17.36 years). Human
immunodeficiency virus serology was negative in 5/10 patients, and one of them did
not have the test done. No information was available about the presence of the virus
in 4/10 patients.The radiograph of the woman showed heterogeneous consolidations and nodules in the
apex and in the lower third of the left lung. The radiographs of the men showed
heterogeneous consolidations in 5/9, linear density in 2/9, pleural involvement in
2/9, fibrosis in 1/9, nodules in1/9, excavations in1/9, and homogeneous
consolidations in 1/9. The radiographic image of one of the male patients was
normal.Figure 7 shows linear density as a pulmonary
tuberculosis sequela in one of the studied patients.
DISCUSSION
The assessment of the chest by imaging methods has been object of a series of recent
publications in the Brazilian radiological literature(. Chest
radiography is an excellent imaging method in the evaluation of pulmonary
tuberculosis(.In the present study, the chest radiographic images showed a higher frequency of
tuberculosis in male patients, in agreement with the literature approaching tuberculosis
in general. According to the Brazilian Ministry of Health, in 2007, the incidence of
tuberculosis in the country was 51/100,000 among men, and 26/100,000 among
women(.Also, the preference of the bacillus for the upper areas of the lungs in the patients of
the present study is in agreement with reports in the literature for non-indigenous
patients. The greater oxygen concentration in such pulmonary areas favors the bacilli
development(.Additionally, in the present study, it was observed that the right lung was preferred by
the bacillus, which is not different from what is observed in the general
population(.In the present study, only 2/81 (2.5%) patients presented normal radiographic images.
The high frequency of radiographic findings in the study population should be taken into
consideration as one analyzes a chest radiograph of an indigenous patient with suspected
pulmonary tuberculosis, as such imaging method hardly presents a normal reading in these
patients. Such a result is different from other studies. Radiographic images of
indigenous Suruí patients of the Amazon state, treated for pulmonary
tuberculosis, were analyzed by Basta et al.( in 2003 and 2004, and 8/22 (36.4%) of them did not present any
abnormality. However, such patients were treated before all the diagnostic possibilities
had been covered. In another study, Pepper et al.( have detected 53/601 (9%) normal radiographic images among
patients who presented with respiratory culture-positive for tuberculosis, referred to
Nashville, Tennessee, USA. The HIV-infectedpatients had increased probability of
presenting normal radiographic images. The probably low prevalence of HIV infection in
the indigenous population included in the present study may explain the low number of
normal radiographic images. However, further studies are necessary to confirm such a
hypothesis.As regards age, the different age ranges were correlated with the presence of only one
type of radiological finding. As compared with adolescents and adult individuals, the
children had a much higher frequency of such finding at their radiographic images,
probably because they have not been reinfected with the bacillus yet.As regards sex, it was observed that fibrosis, heterogeneous consolidation and
involvement of the left lung apex were most frequently found in the male patients. A
possible reason for the higher frequency of fibrosis and heterogeneous consolidations in
men is the fact that they are more susceptible to the disease than the women. The reason
for the difference between sexes in the involvement of the left lung apex should be
object of further studies.On the other hand, atelectasis was present only in adults, and the reasons for this
should be object of specific investigations. Atelectasis is a finding resulting from
compression of the trachea or of the bronchi by enlarged lymphatic ganglia. It also may
be caused by endobronchial tuberculosis(.In the present study, it was not possible to correlate radiological findings of
pulmonary tuberculosis with HIV serology due to the absence of HIV-positivepatients in
the study population. Typically, the Brazilian indigenous peoples present a low
prevalence of HIV infection(.There was a great variety of radiological findings at the images, and most patients
presented more than one type of visible alteration. This means that an indigenous
patient in the study population with pulmonary tuberculosis presents a higher
probability of having more than one type of radiographic finding, rather than only one
type of radiological alteration. The types of alterations observed at the radiographic
images were not different from those observed in the general population(.Heterogeneous consolidations were the most frequent finding at the radiographic images
in the present study, similarly to the findings reported by Basta et al.(. Such an imaging finding was also more
frequent in the cases of pulmonary tuberculosis sequelae, but the low number of patients
whose radiographic images were acquired after treatment did not allow for the analysis
of the correlation between radiological findings and age and sex.The severity of the disease in the studied indigenous patients should be highlighted. It
is known that the high incidence of tuberculosis in the Brazilian indigenous population
may be related to certain characteristics of those individuals, namely, difficult access
to health services, inappropriate housing conditions with poor ventilation and high
concentration of people in a single residence, illiteracy, high malnutrition rates,
intestinal parasitic diseases, alcoholism, as well as immunological
particularities(.
Additionally, in the group of indigenous patients there are linguistic and cultural
barriers which make the treatment more difficult(. These people live in villages, with poor conviviality with
non-indigenous people. All these factors may explain the severe pulmonary involvement
frequently observed in the present study, and such association should be object of
further studies.As regards limitations of the present study, it should be mentioned that some data could
not be collected, considering the retrospective nature of the analysis. Few radiographic
images of patients of the ethnic groups Guarani and Terena were found, precluding the
correlation of findings with the different indigenous groups. Additionally, the lymph
node involvement by tuberculosis can be better characterized at computed tomography as
compared with radiography. However, computed tomography images were not available in the
records of the patients included in the present study. The limitation of radiography in
detecting lymph node involvement may explain the absence of this finding in the studied
children.
CONCLUSION
Considering that chest radiography is a rapid imaging method, it is critical to aid in
the early diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis. The wide range of radiological findings
of the disease in the patients included in the present study indicates that the
understanding of such findings is essential for the agility of diagnosis, as well as for
the treatment and follow-up of the disease in this population. Based on the accepted
hypothesis that indigenous patients represent a population without genetically
determined resistance to tuberculosis, the radiological study related to the pulmonary
involvement by this disease in the indigenous population is essential to improve the
diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in susceptible individuals.
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