1. Extremely high levels of central nervous system involvement in miliary tuberculosis
- Author
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Qing Sun, Ruixia Liang, Chenqian Wang, Xinlei Liao, Hairong Huang, and Gui-rong Wang
- Subjects
Adult ,Central Nervous System ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Miliary tuberculosis ,Tuberculosis, Miliary ,business.industry ,Central nervous system ,Neuroimaging ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,business ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Background Miliary tuberculosis (TB) is one of the severest manifestations of TB that can be lethal when concomitant with the central nervous system (CNS) involvement. Bacteriological, biochemical and radiological methods for find CNS comorbidity in miliary TB was evaluated in this study. Methods Consecutive miliary TB adults were retrospectively enrolled from two designated TB hospitals in China. The capacities of examinations of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), cerebral computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for diagnosis of CNS involvement were assessed. Results Assessment of CNS involvement with a lumbar puncture and/or neuroimaging was undertaken in 282 out of 392 of acute miliary TB. Of these 282 patients, 87.59% (247/282) had CNS involvement. Cerebral contrast-enhanced MRI (96.05%, 170/177) and MRI (93.15%, 204/219) yielded significantly higher sensitivities over CSF examination (71.92%, 146/203, P Conclusion Almost all miliary TB had CNS involvement and MRI demonstrated outstanding potential over other methods. Therefore, a routinely screening of CNS TB should be strongly suggested in miliary TB and MRI could be used as the initial approach in resources rich settings.
- Published
- 2022
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