AB 70. Interesting case of lung, bowel and central nervous system tuberculosis in an immunocompromised patient
Abstract

AB 70. Interesting case of lung, bowel and central nervous system tuberculosis in an immunocompromised patient

Evangelia Fouka, Pinelopi Stephanopoulou, Eleftheria Konstantinou, Nikolaos Loridas, Eftixia Kalaitzidou

1st Pulmonary Department, General Hospital “G. Papanikolaou” Thessaloniki, Greece


Background: Tuberculosis can affect barely all parts of the intestine, though the main location is in the ileocecal region. Tuberculous meningitis is the most common form of CNS involvement, with immunosuppression being the major predisposing factor in adults. Presentation of an interesting case of pulmonary tuberculosis with associated extrapulmonary manifestations.

Patients and methods: A 74 year-old female was admitted in our clinic for investigation of fever, multiple bilateral pulmonary infiltrates and nodular cavitation in the left upper lobe. The patient reported a shortstanding history of rheumatoid arthritis treated with Methotrexate and Infliximab. The patient had been recently investigated for hypochromic microcellular anemia. Colonoscopy revealed a circular lesion in the ascending colon with histological findings negative for malignancy. The subsequent laparotomy was indicative of widespread carcinomatosis, nevertheless cytologic examination of ascitic fluid was still negative for malignancy. Histological examination of tissue specimens did not confirm malignancy, on contrast revealed confluent granulomas without central necrosis and giant Langerhans’ cells accumulation. On presentation the patient was febrile, with obvious wound suppuration. Physical examination of the chest showed mild bilateral crackles at the lung bases. Pulmonary function was satisfactory. During hospitalization, the patient experienced seizures that responded well in anti-epileptic therapy, while the CT scan of the brain revealed only findings of cerebral atrophy. Mantoux test was negative and laboratory findings were normal, apart from mild anemia and elevated ESR. Bronchoscopic findings were inconclusive. The patient underwent colonoscopy which revealed an ulcerative lesion in caecum, with tissue PCR and culture positive for M. Tuberculosis.

Results: In conjunction with the radiological findings of the chest, the patient was administered promptly anti-tuberculous therapy and the diagnosis was confirmed by positive cultures from the bronchial wash and gastric fluid. Assuming CNS involvement due to hematogenous spread of the lung disease, the patient underwent further investigation with brain MRI, which confirmed the diagnosis of leptomeningeal tuberculosis.

Conclusions: Extrapulmonary tuberculosis may have atypical presentation, especially in immunocompromised patients. In such cases, a high degree of suspicion and consideration of clinical and laboratory findings is essential.

Cite this abstract as: Fouka E, Stephanopoulou P, Konstantinou E, Loridas N, Kalaitzidou E. Interesting case of lung, bowel and central nervous system tuberculosis in an immunocompromised patient. J Thorac Dis 2012;4(S1):AB70. DOI: 10.3978/j.issn.2072-1439.2012.s070

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