| Literature DB >> 33675392 |
Xiao Xiao1, Qiang Li1, Yan Ju2.
Abstract
Central nervous system tuberculoma is rare and challenging situation. Clinical records of patients with pathologically proven tuberculoma were retrospectively reviewed. Clinical presentation, lesion location, radiological characteristics, perioperative and surgical management, and outcome is summarized and analyzed. Eight patients were included and there was one girl. Age ranged from 3 to 14 years with mean age 9.8 years. Clinical duration ranged from 20 days to 2 years, and 3 patients had previous lung tuberculosis with anti-TB treatment. The lesion was in cerebellum in 6 cases, including 1 involving basal ganglia and 1 involving thalamus. The lesion was in basal ganglia, thalamus, and third ventricle in 1 case, and in T12-L1 spinal cord in another. Cerebellar lesion was resected via paramedian suboccipital approach in 5 patients, basal ganglia lesion via trans-cortical frontal horn approach in 2 patients, and intra-spinal lesion via trans-laminar approach in 1 patient. Follow-up ranged from 10 to 24 months. Of the 8 patients, 6 returned to normal life. One patient had cerebellar lesion resected and the thalamic lesion reduced in size after anti-TB treatment. One patient died from TB spreading. Our data showed that most patients can be successfully treated by resection of the lesion. Low T2 signal, ring shaped enhancement and peripheral edema strongly suggest tuberculoma. Empirical anti-TB treatment should be initiated perioperatively.Entities:
Keywords: Hydrocephalus; Meningitis; Tuberculoma
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33675392 PMCID: PMC8423696 DOI: 10.1007/s00381-021-05091-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Childs Nerv Syst ISSN: 0256-7040 Impact factor: 1.475
Clinical features of our patients
| No. and gender | Age (years) | Ethnicity | Presentation | Duration | Location | Imaging characteristic | Preop TB | Hydrocephalus | Treatment | Postop course | FU and prognosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.M | 6 | Yi | Fever headache vomiting | 4 months | Cerebellum | Ring enhancement, solitary, low T2, edema | No | Yes | Resection | Good | Good |
| 2.M | 6 | Yi | Headache vomiting | 3 months | Cerebellum | Ring enhancement, multiple, low T2, edema | Yes lung | Yes | Resection | Good | Good |
| 3.M | 13 | Yi | Headache vomiting | 2 months | Cerebellum | Ring enhancement, multiple, low T2, edema | Yes lung | Yes | Resection | Good | Good |
| 4.M | 10 | Tibetan | Headache | 2 years | Cerebellum | Ring enhancement, multiple, low T2, edema | Unknown | Yes EVD | Resection | VPS, 2nd EVD dissemination | Dismal |
| 5.M | 3 | Tibetan | Headache hemiparalysis | 7 months | Cerebellum, thalamus | Ring enhancement, multiple, low T2, edema | No | Yes | Resection (cerebellum) | Fair | Fair |
| 6.F | 14 | Yi | Headache hemiparalysis | 3 months | Basal ganglia, cerebellum | uneven enhancement, multiple, mid-low T2, edema | Yes lung | No | Resection (basal ganglia) | Good | Good |
| 7.M | 14 | Han | Headache fever hemiparalysis | 20 days | Basal ganglia, third ventricle | Ring enhancement, multiple, low T2, edema | No | Yes | Resection (basal ganglia) | Good | Good |
| 8.M | 13 | Han | Lower limb pain paralysis | 2 months | T12-L1 | Ring enhancement, solitary, low T2, edema | No | No | Resection | Good | Good |
EVD external ventricular drainage, VPS ventriculoperitoneal shunt, TB tuberculosis, FU follow-up
Fig. 1Images of Patient 4 with preoperative EVD. a, CT scan showing big calcified lesion in left cerebellum and hydrocephalus. b, MR T1 showing the lesion is iso-intense and lobulated. c, MR T2 showing low intensity, typical of caseous necrosis and marked peripheral edema. d, MR T1 after gadolinium showing ring shaped enhancement of the lesion and prepontine cistern enhancement, suggestive of meningitis. e, CT scan after lesion resection showing complete removal of the tuberculoma. f, CT scan showing the ventricles shrunk and sulci re-appeared after VPS. g-h, end-stage CT scan showing accumulation of hyperdense pus in major cisterns and still enlarged ventricles after 2nd EVD. i, chest CT scan after deterioration showing lung infection suspected of spreading TB
Fig. 2Pathological findings of tuberculoma. a, hematoxylin-eosin staining of tuberculoma (×100). Caseous necrosis is represented by homogenous eosin staining in the upper part *; granuloma is in the middle, represented by infiltration of neutrophils, lymphocytes and epithelia cells**; edematous neural tissue is in the bottom***. b, hematoxylin-eosin staining of tuberculoma showing Langhans giant cell, arrow (×200). c, gross specimen of tuberculoma from T12-L1 in Patient 8 showing outer layer of granuloma (short arrow) and inner part of necrosis (longer arrow). d, part of the tuberculoma from Patient 4 showing whitish cross section of the giant tuberculoma with limited blood supply