1. Pulmonary tuberculosis presenting as mass lesions and simulating neoplasms in adults.
- Author
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Cherian MJ, Dahniya MH, al-Marzouk NF, Abel A, Bader S, Buerki K, and Mahdi OZ
- Subjects
- Adult, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Lung Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
In a review of the chest X-rays and medical records of 597 cases of culture- or biopsy-proven pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB; age range 1.5-72 years), seen over a period of 6 years (1991-97), 26 patients had radiographic patterns unusual for PTB. These patterns were mass-like densities simulating neoplasms, chronic lower lobe airspace opacities without adenopathy, mediastinal adenopathy without parenchymal airspace opacities and bronchopleural fistula without other radiographic abnormalities. The most common of these unusual radiographic patterns was mass-like densities, most of which were initially and mistakenly diagnosed as neoplasms. These masses, seen in 11 adult patients, form the basis of this report. Two children aged 1.5 and 2 years also had tuberculous mass densities initially diagnosed as neurogenic tumour and round pneumonia, respectively. They have been excluded from the present series, and form the subject of another report. The masses were lower lobe predominant and were not usually associated with fibro-productive satellite lesions or with calcification or cavitation. In view of the recent resurgence of PTB and the importance of chest X-rays in its diagnosis and management, this rare radiographic pattern needs to be emphasized.
- Published
- 1998
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