TB Research

Cutaneous Tuberculosis

Akanksha Mahajan, Taru Garg, Kiran Agarwal, Varinder Singh

Indian Pediatrics Case Reports · 2022-10

Abstract

Background: Cutaneous tuberculosis (TB) is a rare disease seen by the pediatrician on an outpatient basis. It has a varied presentation and is classified on the basis of the source of infection and host's immune response to mycobacteria. Lupus vulgaris (LV) is a paucibacillary manifestation of cutaneous TB. It can mimic other infectious skin diseases such as TB verrucosa cutis and chromoblastomycosis. Clinical Description: We hereby present a case report of an adolescent female with a serpiginous, nodular, and warty hyperpigmented skin lesion over her buttock. The lesion had started following incidental injury 7 years back as a papule and continued to expand despite multiple medications. Management: A skin biopsy was done which was suggestive of cutaneous TB, but the absence of systemic features confounded the diagnostic type. She was finally diagnosed as having LV after a detailed review with a dermatologist and pathologist. The patient responded well to antitubercular treatment. Conclusion: Although cutaneous tuberculosis is well described, it is often not recognized by the primary care physician. Diagnostic dilemmas may arise due to clinical-histopathological mismatch.

MeSH terms

  • Medicine
  • Lupus vulgaris
  • Tuberculosis
  • Cutaneous tuberculosis
  • Papule
  • Dermatology
  • Cutis
  • Skin biopsy
  • Lesion
  • Biopsy
  • Pathology