Abdominal tuberculosis in a non-immunosuppressed patient
نویسندگان
چکیده
Tuberculosis (TB) remains prevalent in developing countries and has recently re-emerged in the Western world. The spread of the disease is aided by poverty and overcrowding. However, the increased prevalence of HIV and multidrug-resistant TB has accelerated the gravity of this epidemic [1-5]. The true incidence of intra-abdominal TB is unknown as patients with concurrent pulmonary TB may be asymptomatic from their abdominal disease or have a varied presentation mimicking other common and rare infectious and non-infectious abdominal diseases, including malignancies. This situation can make a proper diagnosis difficult, and may not only result in mortality but also in unnecessary surgery [1,2,5]. We report a case of abdominal tuberculosis who was admitted with severe abdominal pain and a palpable abdominal mass mimicking neoplasm on imaging studies. A 29-year-old-man originating from Ghana, presented with a two month history of abdominal pain. He had a free medical history and has lived in Athens for the last three years, without traveling abroad recently. The abdominal pain was constant and mainly peri-umbilical. He complained of constipation, anorexia and aggravation of abdominal pain by food intake. No fever, night sweats, diarrhea, or nausea were described. On clinical examination his abdomen was soft, but deep palpation was painful in the peri-umbilical area revealing a palpable mass of diameter 8cm. Additional findings included mild hepatomegaly and generalised lymphadenopathy (one cervical lymph node of diameter of 1cm, and multiple inguinal and femoral lymph nodes of maximum diameter of 2cm). Laboratory tests were non-specific and showed mild anemia (Hb 11.7g/dL), elevation of inflammatory markers (ESR 57mm, CRP 99.1mg/L, FIB 616 mg/dL) and increased CA-125 (69.1 U/mL). No parasites were found in stool examination. HIV antibodies were absent. TB skin test was positive (20mm). The chest and plain abdomen radiography were unremarkable. A computed tomography of the abdomen revealed a hypodense mass of mesentery in midline, 5x8x8.5 cm, with normal outline, multi-lobed in some areas, and with mild peripheral enhancement. No ascites or lymphadenopathy was observed. The differential diagnosis included primary neoplasms (lymphangioma, mesothelioma, lipoma/sarcoma, leiomyoma/sarcoma, GIST), metastases from gastrointestinal tract tumors or testicles, lymphoma and infection (tuberculosis, actinomycosis). The computed tomography of the chest did not reveal any lesions. Bone marrow examination had nonspecific findings. Exploratory laparotomy was performed to exclude the possibility of malignant tumor and during the operation a mesenteric mass that included jejunal loops was found, which was partially resected. It was a caseating formation and highly suspect of TB. Histopathology showed epitheloid granulomas with central caseous necrosis and multinucleated giant cells, supposedly of tubercles. Acidfast staining was negative and no microorganism grew from culture including the mass, bone marrow, blood, and urine. The patient received quadruple anti-TB therapy (rifampicin 600mg, isoniazid 300mg, pyrazinamide 1500mg, ethambutol 750mg) and recovered. During the last few years an important increase in the proportion of extra-pulmonary TB has been noted, especially in immunosuppressed patients. A high index of suspicion
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