| Literature DB >> 26850778 |
Sze Li Siow1,2, Hon Leong Sha3, Chee Ming Wong3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Abdominal tuberculosis (TB) is an uncommon affliction in adolescence. It is usually associated with pulmonary tuberculosis. The disease is caused by lymphohaematogenous spread after primary infection in the lung or ingestion of infected sputum and has a typically protean and nonspecific presentation. The occurrence of TB in an urachal remnant is probably from the contiguous spread of an abdominal focus or mesenteric lymph node. Urachal TB is a rare entity, with only two reported cases in the literature. We report here a case of clinically silent pulmonary and abdominal TB that manifested in the infection of an urachal sinus and highlight the role of laparoscopy in its diagnosis and treatment. CASEEntities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26850778 PMCID: PMC4744458 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1405-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Comparison of case reports of urachal tuberculosis
| Author, publication year | Presentation | Age, gender | Imaging modality | Surgical management | Mode of diagnosis of TB | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fujimoto et al., [ | Pollakiuria and non-tender infra-umbilical abdominal mass | 62-year-old, Male | MRI of the abdomen | Open En bloc resection with partial cystectomy | PCR test | Recovered well |
| Jindal et al., [ | Intermittent peri-umbilical pain, low grade fever, and loss of weight | 23-year-old, Male | CT of the abdomen | Open En bloc resection | Histological examination characteristic of TB | Recovered well |
| Present case | Peri-umbilical pain, swelling and purulent discharge from umbilicus | 14-year-old, Male | CT of the abdomen | Laparoscopic resection of urachal cyst, and biopsy of the nodules over the peritoneum and falciform ligament | Histological examination characteristic of TB | Recovered well |
TB tuberculosis, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, CT computed tomography, PCR polymerase chain reaction
Fig. 1Computed tomography scan of abdomen showing the urachal abscess. a Sagittal view b Transverse view
Fig. 2Laparoscopic view showing the parietal and visceral peritoneum studded with tubercles. Urachal sinus (white arrow) was seen attached to the anterior surface of the sigmoid colon (black arrow)