1 / 29

Case Presentation

Case Presentation. Ezana M. Azene. HPI – Day 1. 35 y/o immigrant from Guatemala living in U.S. for past 3 years CC: 3 months burning left-sided abdominal pain radiating to epigastrium and back. Physical Exam – Day 1. Febrile

gino
Télécharger la présentation

Case Presentation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Case Presentation Ezana M. Azene

  2. HPI – Day 1 • 35 y/o immigrant from Guatemala living in U.S. for past 3 years • CC: 3 months burning left-sided abdominal pain radiating to epigastrium and back

  3. Physical Exam – Day 1 • Febrile • Abdomen soft with moderate TTP diffusely, mild guarding without rebound, normal bowel sounds, possible splenomegaly • Remainder of exam normal

  4. Relevant Initial Lab-work – Day 1 • Hct: 26↓, WBCC: 3.3 ↓ (4% ↓ lymphocytes) • Alb: 1.7↓, TP: 7.3 (gamma gap = 5.6↑) • AlkPhos: 727 ↑ (with GGT↑), AST 116 ↑, ALT 81 ↑ • Lipase: normal

  5. Initial CE CT – Day 1 2 cm MIP

  6. Initial CE CT – Day 1

  7. Initial CE CT – Day 1

  8. Initial CE CT – Day 1

  9. CT report – Day 1 • “… very suggestive of mycobacterial … infection. Extensive fat stranding makes lymphoma or other malignancy less likely.”

  10. Admitting Plan • IV fluids • HIV serology • TB w/u (including sputum AFB and sputum/blood culture) • Negative pressure isolation and droplet precautions

  11. Abdominal U/S – Day 2 Increased omental echogenicity Omentum Spleen

  12. U/S Report • “Mass-like thickening of the omentum. Findings worrisome for TB peritonitis”

  13. Hospital Course Sputum AFB negative Culture negative • HIV positive (CD4 ~ 60) – Day 2 • ID consult – Day 2 • DDx: Lymphoma > disseminated histoplasmosis > typhoid fever > TB > septic emboli • “Would continue off antimicrobial therapy” • Recommended tissue biopsy • Hematology consult – Day 4 • DDx: Lymphoma > TB

  14. Hospital Course Sputum AFB negative Culture negative • Abdominal paracentesis – Day 5 • Reactive cells, no malignancy • AFB negative • Cultures pending • Respiratory isolation stopped – Day 5 or 6 • Bone marrow biopsy – Day 6 • Negative • Echocardiogram – Day 10 • Normal

  15. Hospital Course • Unstable, ICU transfer – Day 10 • Non-con CT: calcified perihepatic lymph node (missed on CE CT) • Liver core biopsy – Day 11 • Granuloma with rare filamentous AFB • TB Rx started – Day 11 (I think…) Actinomyces? TB? Nocardia?

  16. Hospital Course • CT guided omental biopsy – Day 12 • Benign fibroadipose tissue with focal granuloma • Patient rapidly improved and discharged home – Day 19

  17. Post-Hospital Course • Initial induced sputum cultures positive for TB 4 days after discharge • Initial blood cultures positive for TB 1 day after discharge • Liver biopsy culture positive for TB 4 days after discharge • Omental biopsy culture positive for TB 6 days after discharge • Ascites was never positive for TB or AFB

  18. Current Patient Status • Not fully compliant with D.O.T.S. and HAART • May need incarceration

  19. Mechanism of Spread to Peritoneum, Omentum, and Mesentery • Infection of GI mucosa by contaminated milk or swallowed sputum followed by transmural spread • Direct hematogenous spread • Lymphatic spread with direct extension • e.g. from ruptured necrotic lymph nodes Through the Laparoscope Tiny peritoneal nodules (appear confluent on CT) Ascites Omental thickening Eur Radiol (2004) 14:E103–E115 The Internet Journal of Infectious Diseases. 2010 Volume 8 Number 2

  20. Frequency of TBP • TB peritonitis occurs in < 4% of TB patients • However, in developing countries, up to … • 30% of non-pulmonary TB involves TB peritonitis • 20% of all ascites is due to TB peritonitis • Increased risk with alcoholism, cirrhosis, renal failure, diabetes mellitus, malignancy, intravenous drug abuse, steroid therapy, and AIDS. Eur Radiol (2004) 14:E103–E115 Singapore Med J 2008; 49(6) : 488

  21. Mortality of TBP • 15-60% in post-antibiotic era • Higher when hepatic cirrhosis present • “The high mortality for tuberculousperitonitis is explained, at least in part, by its highly variable and often nonspecific clinical presentation and the practical difficulties in establishing an early bacteriologic diagnosis.” • EARLY INITIATION OF THERAPY REDUCES MORTALITY Chow et al. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2002; 35:409–13

  22. Classic Types of TBP (basically useless) • Wet type (90%) • Free or loculatedascites • Fibrotic fixed type occurs (60%) • Omental masses and matted loops of bowel and mesentery • Dry or plastic type (10%) • Caseous lymph nodes, fibrous peritoneal reaction, and dense adhesions • Our case was Wet + Dry Journal of Clinical Imaging 28 (2004) 340–343

  23. Biochemical Diagnosis of TBP • Adenosine Deaminase elevated in ascites • In one meta-analysis, ADA levels showed high sensitivity (100%) and specificity (97%) • CA 125 may be elevated (mimicking ovarian CA) J ClinGastroenterolVolume 40, Number 8, September 2006

  24. Microbiological Diagnosis of TBP • Ascites smear, PCR and culture have extremely low sensitivity (<5% in most studies) • Lymphocytic exudate usually present • Tissue biopsy usually needed • Omentum or lymph nodes • Granulomas (usually caseating) • Not always smear positive • High sensitivity with liquid culture J ClinGastroenterol Volume 40, Number 8, September 2006

  25. CT Appearance Suggestive of TBP • Smooth, mild, non-nodular peritoneal thickening with pronounced enhancement • “Smudged” appearance of omentum (extensive stranding) • Presence of mesenteric macronodules (> 5 mm) • Splenic hypodensities and splenomegaly • Low density and/or calcified lymph nodes • Ascites may be higher density than water Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography Volume 20(2), March/April 1996, pp 269-272 Eur Radiol (2004) 14:E103–E115 Singapore Med J 2008; 49(6) : 488

  26. US Appearance of TBP • Increased omental echogenicity • Diffuse, hypoechoic peritoneal thickening (2-6 mm) • Echogenic fibrous strands creating locculations of ascites • Most useful for guiding biopsy

  27. DDx • Omental and peritoneal findings • Malignancy (carcinomatosis (esp. ovaian), mesothelioma, lymphoma) • Non-TB peritonitis • Hypodense lymph nodes • Whipple disease • Typhoid fever • Celiac Disease • Burkitt/Burkitt-type lymphoma • Treated lymphoma and necrotic metastases • Splenic Hypodensities • Lymphoma • Sarcoidosis • Non-TB microabscesses • Lymphatic malformations • Vascular anomalies

  28. Summary • TB peritonitis carries high mortality and requires rapid treatment • Image-guided biopsy (omental, lymph node) is best chance for definitive diagnosis • Usually no need for surgical biopsy • Imaging, especially CT, may be 1st clue to diagnosis • If characteristic findings are present in appropriate epidemiological setting… TREAT, then stop treatment if you’re wrong

  29. Summary • Think of TB Peritonitis if 2 or more… • Extensive omental and mesenteric fat stranding • Hypodense abdominal lymph nodes • Splenic hypodensities • Higher than normal density ascites (not like blood, though) • Smooth peritoneal thickening • Moderate peritoneal enhancement

More Related