Rare Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis: Covert symptoms and Diagnostic Dilemma

Main Article Content

Guddi Rani Singh
Anila Sinha
Anushweta
Richa Sharma
Kumar Saurabh
Debaditya Haldar

Keywords

Ziehl-Neelsen stain, necrosis, granuloma, Extrapulmonary tuberculosis

Abstract

Background: Pulmonary tuberculosis may result in haematogenous and lymphatic extension in case of failure of early detection, or immunocompromised status, leading to extrapulmonary tuberculosis. Rare sites of extrapulmonary tuberculosis include the gastrointestinal tract, musculoskeletal system, genital tract, middle ear and pericardium. Histopathological findings of macro-confluent granuloma with or without caseous necrosis, along with detection of acid-fast bacilli (AFB) on Ziehl-Neelsen (ZN) staining, and GeneXpert for detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA, are key in establishing a diagnosis of tuberculosis.


Methodology: Biopsy-proven extrapulmonary granulomatous lesions were included in this study. Histopathological evaluation of all extrapulmonary biopsy specimens sent to the Department of Pathology were done for the presence of granuloma and necrosis, and ZN staining for AFB was done in all the cases of granulomatous lesions with or without the presence of necrosis. The same cases, with biopsy specimens sent in normal saline, were re-evaluated in a molecular laboratory with the help of GeneXpert MTB to detect the DNA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. All biopsy specimens from extrapulmonary sites which were sent to the Department of Pathology were used for DNA extraction.


Results: Out of the 10 cases of extrapulmonary granulomatous lesions, 8 showed caseous necrosis on microscopy, and 7 showed the presence of acid-fast bacilli on Ziehl-Neelsen staining. GeneXpert detected DNA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in 9 cases.


Conclusion: Extrapulmonary tuberculosis rarely occurs as primary, and mostly spreads from lung parenchyma via a haematogenous route. Tuberculosis of the gastrointestinal tract, peritoneum, lymph nodes, and solid viscera are together termed abdominal tuberculosis. Entities like tuberculosis of the pericardium and ear are extremely rare. Extrapulmonary tuberculosis should be a differential in cases of chronic non-responding cases with diagnostic dilemmas. To avoid diagnostic delay, in cases of high suspicion, one should go for biopsy along with ZN staining for diagnostic confirmation as this is cost-effective, followed by GeneXpert for Mycobacterium tuberculosis in highly suspected cases with absent caseous necrosis and negative ZN staining.

Abstract 288 | PDF Downloads 217 EPUB Downloads 65 HTML Downloads 26

References

[1] Ates Guler S, Bozkus F, Inci MF, Kokoglu OF, Ucmak H, Ozden S. et al. Evaluation of pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis in immunocompetent adults: a retrospective case series analysis. Medical Principles and Practice. 2015 Jan 1;24(1):75-9.

[2] Zumla A. Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's principles and practice of infectious diseases. The Lancet Infectious Diseases. 2010 May 1;10(5):303-4.

[3] Lavadi RS, Sandeep BV, Banga MS, Halhalli S, Kishan A. Spinal intramedullary tuberculoma in a 3-year-old girl. Surgical Neurology International. 2021;12.

[4] Rivas-Garcia A, Sarria-Estrada S, Torrents-Odin C, Casas-Gomila L, Franquet E. Imaging findings of Pott’s disease. European Spine Journal. 2013 Jun; 22:567-78.

[5] García-Rodríguez JF, Álvarez-Díaz H, Lorenzo-García MV, Mariño-Callejo A, Fernández-Rial Á,Sesma-Sánchez P. Extrapulmonary tuberculosis: epidemiology and risk factors. Enfermedade sinfecciosasy microbiologia clinica. 2011 Aug1;29(7):502-9.

[6] González-Martín J, García-García JM, Anibarro L, Vidal R, Esteban J, Blanquer R. et al.Documento de consenso sobre diagnóstico, tratamiento prevención de la tuberculosis. Enfermedades Infecciosasy Microbiología Clínica. 2010 May 1;28(5):297-e1.

[7] Udgirkar S, Jain S, Pawar S, Chandnani S, Contractor Q, Rathi P. Clinical profile, drug resistance pattern and treatment outcomes of abdominal tuberculosis patients in Western India. Arq Gastroenterol. 2019 Aug 13;56(2):178-83.

[8] Uzunkoy A, Harma M, Harma M. Diagnosis of abdominal tuberculosis: experience from 11 cases and review of the literature. World journal of gastroenterology: WJG. 2004 Dec 12;10(24):3647.

[9] Gopalaswamy R, Dusthackeer VA, Kannayan S, Subbian S. Extrapulmonary tuberculosis - an update on the diagnosis,treatment and drug resistance. Journal of Respiration. 2021 May 26;1(2):141-64.

[10] Hickey AJ, Gounder L, Moosa MY, Drain PK. A systematic review of hepatic tuberculosis with considerations in human immunodeficiency virus co-infection. BMC Infectious Diseases. 2015 Dec; 15:1-1.

[11] Rajabi MH, Gharaei HA, ArabAhmadi A, Yarmohammadi M. Isolated tuberculosis of testis: A case report.Caspian Journal of Internal Medicine. 2021;12(1):111.

[12] Grace GA, Devaleenal DB, Natrajan M. Genital tuberculosis in females. The Indian journal of medical research. 2017 Apr;145(4):425.

[13] Leonard Jr MK, Blumberg HM. Musculoskeletal tuberculosis. Microbiology Spectrum. 2017 Jun 1:371-92.

[14] Mayosi BM, Burgess LJ, Doubell AF. Tuberculous pericarditis. Circulation. 2005 Dec 6;112(23):3608-16.

[15] Sebastian SK, Singhal A, Sharma A, Doloi P. Tuberculous otitis media–series of 10 cases. Journal of otology. 2020 Sep 1;15(3):95-8.

Most read articles by the same author(s)