| Literature DB >> 27998317 |
Jorge Tellez-Rodriguez1, Rubi Lopez-Fernandez1, Rodolfo Rodriguez-Jurado2, Hayde Nallely Moreno-Sandoval3, Francisco Martinez-Perez4, Juan Antonio Gonzalez-Barrios5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis is considered an emerging disease worldwide; in the last 10 years, its incidence has increased to more than 9.6 million cases of active tuberculosis. In 2014, it resulted in 1.5 million patient deaths. However, oral presentation with bone involvement occurs in less than 3% of all reported cases and rarely arouses clinical suspicion on initial presentation. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Case report; Jaw; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Osteomyelitis; Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27998317 PMCID: PMC5175378 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-016-1118-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Fig. 1Clinical imaging of our patient with tuberculous osteomyelitis in the left mandible showing left-sided cheek swelling. (a) Frontal and (b) lateral views displaying mandible tuberculosis symptoms. (c) Frontal and (d) lateral views of three-dimensional reconstruction by computed tomography showing erosion and perforations of the cortical periosteal bone
Fig. 2Technetium-99 m-ciprofloxacin accumulation in the mandible. Images show an abnormal concentrated area of radiolabeled antibiotic at the level of the left mandible, suggesting an infectious disease process. (a) Frontal view. (b) Oblique view. (c) Lateral view. The arrows indicate the site of 99mTc-Ciprofloxacine accumulation
Fig. 3Macroscopic and histological characteristics of jaw and real-time polymerase chain reaction-based diagnosis. a Macroscopic characteristics of inner side of jaw. Large eroded areas accompanied by bleeding and bone decalcification can be seen. b Histopathological characteristics. Extensive chronic osteomyelitis process can be seen. c Molecular diagnosis of tuberculous osteomyelitis of the jaw. Both markers, susceptible Mycobacterium tuberculosis and M. tuberculosis-positive control, conformed to the M. tuberculosis diagnosis. S-MTB Susceptible Mycobacterium tuberculosis biopsy patient sample positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis, MTB-(C+) Mycobacterium tuberculosis-positive control, NTM-(C+) Nontuberculous mycobacteria-positive control, IC Internal control, NC Negative control
Comparative characteristics of reported tuberculous osteomyelitis of the jaw during infancy
| Sex, age [reference] | Clinical findings | Mandibular Region | Histological diagnosis | Methods for tuberculosis diagnosis | Treatment (follow-up) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male, 3 years old [ | 1 month | Angle | Granulomatous osteomyelitis consistent with tuberculosis | Primary. | Antitubercular therapy (6 months) |
| Male, 4 years old [ | 1 month | Body | Granulomatous osteomyelitis | Secondary | Antitubercular chemotherapy (6 months) |
| Female, 10 years old [ | 2 months | Body | Caseous granuloma | Primary | Antitubercular chemotherapy for 8 months |
| Female, 14 years old [ | 2 months | Angle | Epithelioid cell granuloma with caseous necrosis | Primary | Antitubercular therapy |
| Female, 18 years old [ | 8 months | Ramus | Caseous granuloma | Primary | Not started |
| Female, 9 years old [ | 3 months | Angle | Multiple epithelioid cell granulomas | Primary | Antitubercular treatment (9 months) |
| Female, 16 years old [ | 6 months | Ramus | Granulation tissue | Primary | Antitubercular treatment (9 months) |
| Female, 16 years old | 7 months | Body | Chronic osteomyelitic process | Primary | Antitubercular treatment (9 months) |
AFB Acid-fast bacilli, PCR Polymerase chain reaction