| Literature DB >> 34957142 |
Gaetano Rea1, Marco Sperandeo2, Roberta Lieto1, Marialuisa Bocchino3, Carla Maria Irene Quarato4, Beatrice Feragalli5, Tullio Valente1, Giulia Scioscia4, Ernesto Giuffreda4, Maria Pia Foschino Barbaro4, Donato Lacedonia4.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) is a severe infectious disease that still represents a major cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide. For these reasons, clinicians and radiologists should use all the available diagnostic tools in the assessment of the disease in order to provide precise indications about starting an anti-tubercular treatment and reduce risk of TB transmission and complications especially in developing countries where the disease is still endemic. As TB mycobacteria are mainly transmitted through respiratory droplets, the pulmonary parenchyma is usually the first site of infection. As a result, chest imaging plays a central role in the diagnostic process. Thoracic ultrasound (TUS) is a portable, non-invasive, radiation-free, and cost-contained technology which could be easily available in resource-limited settings. This perspective article focuses on the potential role of TUS in the diagnosis and management of patients with pulmonary TB. Unfortunately, there are still insufficient evidence and too contrasting data to judge TUS as an appropriate diagnostic method for the screening of the disease. Despite this, TUS may have a useful role in identifying pleural and anterior pericardial effusions or in the identification of abscesses of the anterior chest wall and paraspinal collections in low- and middle-income settings. In addition, TUS seems to have a milestone role in guiding minimally invasive interventional procedures, such as placement of chest tubes, drainage of loculated collections, thoracentesis and pericardiocentesis, and percutaneous biopsy of subpleural pulmonary consolidations or pleural plaques.Entities:
Keywords: chest X-ray (CXR); chest computed tomography (chest CT); chest imaging; diagnosis and management; pulmonary tuberculosis; thoracic ultrasound (TUS)
Year: 2021 PMID: 34957142 PMCID: PMC8703038 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2021.753821
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Chest X-ray, chest CT and Ultrasound appearances of an organized effusion in a patient with post-primary TB. (A) Chest X-ray shows a right pulmonary opacity that is not in the gravity dependent location (red arrow). We are able to see the diaphragm medially (black arrow). No septation is seen. (B) Chest CT shows a large loculated right pleural effusion surrounded by a thickened pleural wall (yellow arrow) and lung atelectasis (white arrow). No septation is assessed inside. (C) Thoracic ultrasound (TUS) scan reveals presence of multiple fibrin strands (i.e., thin, mobile, linear hyperechoic structures, pink arrows) forming a septated pleural effusion (complex US aspect). (D) TUS lower thoracic view (diaphragm, black arrow) of the pleural effusion showing multiple septations (pink arrows) and loculations (green box). (E) TUS scan during ultrasound-guided thoracentesis allowing real-time visualization of the needle (white arrow) in an anechoic pleural effusion.
Figure 2Chest CT and TUS appearance of miliary TB. (A) Axial CT scan shows hundreds of minutes “millet grain” nodules with a typical random distribution. (B) TUS highlights a marked irregularity of the hyperechoic pleural line (red arrow), that appears as blurred and fragmented. Chest CT and TUS appearance of a tuberculous abscess of the anterior chest wall. (C) Axial CT scan with contrast shows a tuberculous abscess with a low-attenuation central necrotic component and capsular ring enhancement extending from the pleura to right chest wall and infiltrating the rib and soft tissues. (D) TUS scan shows a hypoechoic collection in right antero-lateral chest wall with internal echo-debris and no Color-Power Doppler inner signal.