| Literature DB >> 27034677 |
Chonticha Srivanitchapoom1, Pichit Sittitrai2.
Abstract
Nasopharyngeal tuberculosis (NPTB) is a noteworthy disease especially in its worldwide spread of the Mycobacterium infection. Although NPTB has been identified in less than one percent of TB cases, recent multiple case reports indicate an either increased awareness or incidence of this disease. The most helpful diagnostic tool is an uncomplicated nasopharyngeal biopsy. However, NPTB is usually ignored because it has varied clinical manifestations and similar presentations with other more common head and neck diseases. Furthermore, the most common presenting symptom is cervical lymphadenopathy mimicking nasopharyngeal carcinoma, a more common and serious disease. Treatment outcomes of NPTB are good in both HIV-positive or HIV-negative patients. In addition, pulmonary tuberculosis association was reported in wide range between 8.3% and 82% which should be considered in a treatment program. In conclusion, early diagnosis and management in NPTB can be achieved by (1) increased awareness of this disease, (2) improvement in knowledge regarding clinical manifestations, and (3) improvement of diagnostic techniques.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27034677 PMCID: PMC4789561 DOI: 10.1155/2016/4817429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Otolaryngol ISSN: 1687-9201
Summary of large series NPTB cases.
| Authors | Country | Year | Sex | Age (mean) | Associated with | Number of cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jian et al. [ | China | 2012 | NA | NA | NA | 50 |
| Cai et al. [ | China | 2013 | 15 : 21 | 17–68 (30.5) | 31% (11/36) | 36 |
| Srirompotong et al. [ | Thailand | 2004 | 9 : 14 | 20–71 (38) | 44.4% (8/18) | 23 |
|
Wang and Zhu [ | China | 2013 | NA | NA | NA | 19 |
| Tse et al. [ | Hong Kong | 2003 | 4 : 13 | 20–74 (39) | 55.6% (5/9) | 17 |
| Chongkolwatana et al. [ | Thailand | 1998 | 7 : 8 | 7–65 (31.7) | 36.4% (4/11) | 15 |
| Eng et al. [ | Taiwan | 1996 | 2 : 12 | 17–61 (NA) | NA | 14 |
| Su et al. [ | China | 2002 | NA | NA | 8.3% (1/12) | 12 |
| Waldron et al. [ | Hong Kong | 1992 | 5 : 5 | 25–76 (40.5) | 10% (1/10) | 10 |
| Oudidi et al. [ | Morocco | 2007 | 2 : 4 | NA (41) | NA | 6 |
[reference number] = article in non-English language and only abstract available.
NA = not available.
Clinical characters of cervical lymphadenopathy in NPTB.
| Authors | % of lymphadenopathy | Bilateral (%) : unilateral (%) | Multiple (%) : solitary (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cai et al. [ | 80.6% (29 : 36) | 65.5 : 34.5 | 79.3 : 20.7 |
| Srirompotong et al. [ | 91.3% (21 : 23) | 71.4 : 28.6 | 90.5 : 9.5 |
| Tse et al. [ | 58.8% (10 : 17) | 20 : 80 | NA |
| Chongkolwatana et al. [ | 93.3% (14 : 15) | 42.9 : 57.1 | 64.3 : 35.7 |
| Waldron et al. [ | 70% (7 : 10) | 57.1 : 42.9 | 71.4 : 28.6 |
Figure 1A 32-year-old woman, nasopharyngeal examination shows irregular redness mucosa and white patch covers the nasopharyngeal area.
Nasopharyngeal findings from large 4 series.
| Nasopharyngeal findings | Srirompotong et al. [ | Tse et al. [ | Chongkolwatana et al. [ | Waldron et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | 7 (30%) | 1 (6%) | 2 (13.3%) | 2 (20%) |
| Irregular mucosa | 5 (22%) | 6 (35%) | 7 (46.6%) | NA |
| Ulcerative | 2 (9%) | 1 (6%) | 1 (6.7%) | NA |
| Mass | 9 (39%) | 6 (35%) | 3 (20%) | 4 (40%) |
| Bulging or swelling | NA | 1 (6%) | 1 (6.7%) | NA |
| White patch on mucosa | NA | 1 (6%) | NA | NA |
| Lymphoid enlargement | NA | NA | 1 (6.7%) | 4 (40%) |
| No data | NA | 1 (6%) | NA | NA |
NA = not available.
Summary of CT/MRI findings [10, 44].
| Site | CT/MRI findings |
|---|---|
| Nasopharynx | Polypoid mass |
| Diffuse thickening of the mucosal wall of nasopharynx | |
| Less extension outside the nasopharynx | |
| Less invasion into surrounding structures such as prevertebral muscle, nasal cavity, and oropharynx | |
| Lesion necrosis especially within small nasopharyngeal lesion | |
| Destruction of striped feature | |
|
| |
| Lymph node | Homogeneous contrast enhancement (early phase) |
| Peripheral rim enhancement with central necrosis (progression phase) | |
| Fibrosis and calcification may have homogeneous appearance without enhancement (late phase) | |
| Shortest axial diameter ≥ 5 mm for retropharyngeal LN and ≥10 mm for LN of neck | |
Figure 2A 32-year-old woman, axial contrast-enhanced CT shows diffuse mucosal thickening without invasion into surrounding structures.
Figure 3A 32-year-old woman, sagittal contrast-enhanced CT shows small central necrosis area in the nasopharyngeal lesion.