Tuberculous appendicitis: A review of reported cases over the past 10 years
Grant Hubbard, Walter J. Chlysta
Journal of Clinical Tuberculosis and Other Mycobacterial Diseases · 2021-03
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculous appendicitis is a rare extrapulmonary manifestation of tuberculosis without clear summarization or consensus on its management. DATA SOURCES: s, and appendiceal tuberculosis identified incidentally during procedures for other reasons. RESULTS: Thirty four patients were identified. Twenty five patients presented with acute right lower quadrant abdominal pain. Eleven patients described chronic symptoms of tuberculosis (cough, night sweats, or weakness/fatigue). Four patients had a known diagnosis of TB. Seven of 24 cases reported peri-operative chest imaging which demonstrated pulmonary lesions. AFB were present in tissue or fluid samples of 6 patients, and negative in 15 patients. All patients underwent pharmacotherapy on a WHO-recommended anti-tuberculous treatment (ATT) with RIPE or an alternative. The average duration of treatment was 7.2 ± 1.7 months. LIMITATIONS: Data was gathered from case reports without complete uniformity in diagnostic work-up. The potential for larger scale study is limited due to disease rarity. CONCLUSIONS: Tuberculous appendicitis cannot be diagnosed prior to histologic evaluation. Several data points may suggest the disease on a clinician's differential diagnosis if they present with a combination of the following: born in a country with endemic tuberculosis; chronic cough, weakness/fatigue, or nausea prior to onset of abdominal pain; pulmonary lesions on chest X-ray; white studding of the mesentery or peritoneum in a young patient; positive AFB stain of abdominal fluid or peritoneal tissue.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Tuberculosis
- Appendicitis
- Abdominal pain
- Differential diagnosis
- Nausea
- Weakness
- Surgery
- Chest pain
- Appendix