Cutaneous tuberculosis as a manifestation of Pott's Disease: A diagnostic challenge in patients with Non-HIV immunosuppression.

Category Primary study
JournalInternational journal of mycobacteriology
Year 2023
Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the most important public health issues in developing countries. The World Health Organization estimates that approximately 20%-40% of the world's population is infected. Pulmonary forms account for the majority of cases; however, it can manifest as extrapulmonary disease in 8.4%-13.7% of cases. Of these extrapulmonary forms of TB, only 1%-2% may have skin manifestations. Cutaneous tuberculosis (CTB) is relatively uncommon and is not a well-defined disease, which complicates diagnosis. We present two patients with Pott's disease that manifested as CTB, one with tuberculous gumma and the other with scrofuloderma. Both patients with non-HIV immunosuppression. The diagnosis of CTB was made by detecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis in skin samples by real-time polymerase chain reaction (Xpert MTB/RIF test) and Ziehl-Neelsen staining. The histologic findings described in these two forms of TB may vary or be absent in immunosuppressed patients, making diagnosis difficult.
Epistemonikos ID: 91a7e22a4c4c6881452f1d8de468c3f08cc5d34d
First added on: Nov 09, 2024