Intracranial Tuberculoma Mimicking Neurosarcoidosis: A Clinical Challenge
Fatemah Abbasi, Muhammet Özer, Kirti Juneja, Suleyman Yasin Goksu, Babak Jamasian Mobarekah, Marc Whitman
Infectious Disease Reports · 2021-03
Abstract
Central nervous system (CNS) tuberculosis is a rare manifestation of all tuberculosis presentations. The incidence of brain tuberculoma is increasing in developed countries due to HIV infection and immigration from tuberculosis-endemic countries. Symptoms and radiologic findings of CNS tuberculosis can be non-specific and lead to misdiagnosis or mistreatment. Intracranial tuberculoma can present with a seizure, intracranial hypertension, or focal neurologic symptoms. In our case, the diagnosis was challenging between neurosarcoidosis and intracranial tuberculoma due to inconclusive results of stereotactic brain biopsy and clinical presentation. The pathology result of the open brain biopsy revealed non-caseating granuloma. Finally, we were able to diagnose intracranial tuberculoma following acid-fast bacilli culture results of open brain biopsy. This report highlights the importance of including intracranial tuberculoma in the differential diagnosis of cerebral space-occupying lesions, even in patients with negative laboratory findings of tuberculosis.
MeSH terms
- Tuberculoma
- Medicine
- Neurosarcoidosis
- Tuberculosis
- Brain biopsy
- Differential diagnosis
- Sarcoidosis
- Granuloma
- Biopsy
- Caseous necrosis
- GeneXpert MTB/RIF
- Meninges
- Radiology
- Pathology