Tuberculosis (TB) remains a global burden despite extensive efforts to control it. TB arthritis commonly manifest as monoarthritis of weight-bearing joints. We report a rare presentation of osteoarticular TB involving multiple small joints of the hands, which mimicked rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Magnetic resonance imaging showed tenosynovitis. The patient was initially treated for seronegative RA but failed to respond. Subsequently, synovial biopsy led to the diagnosis. Antituberculosis treatment was given for 1 year.
Tuberculosis (TB) and its association with rheumatic diseases have been widely recognised. Occurrence of multifocal skeletal involvement constitutes <5% of all skeletal TB cases. We present a Malay patient with multifocal osteoarticular TB (OATB). A 35 year-old SLE woman with background usage of corticosteroid therapy and Azathioprine presented with lupus nephritis flare. Renal biopsy revealed diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis and intravenous (IV) Cyclophosphamide 0.5 g/m2 (850 mg) was initiated. One week later, patient complained dorsum of left hand and right knee swelling. On physical examination, patient was afebrile and the left hand swelling was cystic in consistency while right knee was warm and tender. Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR) was 50 mm/hr and C-Reactive Protein (CRP) was 9.4 mg/L. Her Mantoux test was positive with 20 mm induration. Wrist radiograph and chest radiograph was normal. Musculoskeletal ultrasound showed 4th extensor compartment tenosynovitis with Doppler signal and right knee effusion with synovial proliferation. Extensor tenosynovectomy and right knee aspiration was performed. Left hand excised tissue and right knee synovial fluid for acid-fast bacilli (AFB) stain, TB PCR, bacterial and fungal cultures were negative. Urgent histopathological examination of the excised tissue showed necrotising granulomatous inflammation. Patient was empirically started on TB treatment and subsequent mycobacterial culture confirmed the diagnosis of TB. The joints swelling resolved after one month of TB treatment. Multifocal OATB is an infrequent form of extrapulmonary TB and diagnosing OATB requires high index of suspicion particularly in SLE patient on immunosuppression. Prompt investigations are essential to the diagnosis of this rare condition for early initiation of anti-tuberculous therapy.
We report a case of a lady presenting with a lesion in the distal radius with classical radiological features of a giant-cell tumour. These tumours are often resected without preliminary histological confirmation. A biopsy done in this patient showed it to be tuberculosis.
Tuberculosis (TB) is the most prevalent infectious disease in Southeast Asia. It causes both pulmonary and extrapulmonary diseases. TB of the wrist is rare and presents as osteomyelitis or tenosynovitis. We report a middle-aged male with carpal bone tuberculous osteomyelitis. He presented with left wrist pain initially treated as gouty arthritis. Within 2 weeks, he developed seropurulent discharge with osteomyelitic changes on imaging. He underwent debridement, and intraoperatively, there was destruction of most carpal bones. Histopathological examination revealed chronic granulomatous inflammation with abscess formation. Anti-TB medication was initiated, and he made a complete recovery with almost full range of wrist movement after 9 months of treatment. This case serves as a reminder that TB is a great mimicker, and a high index of suspicion is required to make a diagnosis of TB of the wrist. Early initiation of anti-TB is pivotal to prevent complications and deterioration of joint functions.
The presentation and management of psoas abscess was studied prospectively in 5 patients and retrospectively in 4. 3 patients had bilateral abscesses. All patients had back pain and a mass in loin or iliac fossa. 7 patients had no hip findings. One patient had a perinephric abscess and another had radiological features of tuberculosis of the spine. In the other seven no cause for the abscess could be identified. Ultrasonography demonstrated the abscess in all patients; CT scanning done in 5 patients was confirmatory. Drainage was done by an extraperitoneal route. Biopsy of the abscess wall in 2 patients demonstrated tuberculosis. They, the patient with TB spine and 3 others put empirically on anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy responded well. The perinephric abscess grew Pseudomonas sensitive to gentamycin, but she and two other patients died due to multiorgan failure.