|
Oya
Uygur-Bayramiçli,
Resat Dabak, Head of Endoscopy Unit, Kartal State Hospital,
Istanbul, Turkey
Gül Dabak, Heybeliada Chest Diseases Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey
Correspondence to: Oya Uygur-Bayramiçli,
Altunizade mah. Atyf bey sok çamlyk
sit II.Kysym A Blok No53/10, üsküdar 81020 - Istanbul, Turkey. bayramicli@hotmail.com
Telephone: +90-216-4184063
Fax: +90-216-3511994
Received: 2003-01-18
Accepted: 2003-02-19
Abstract
AIM: To evaluate the clinical, radiological and microbiological
properties of abdominal tuberculosis (TB) and to discuss methods
needed to get the diagnosis.
METHODS: Thirty-one patients diagnosed as abdominal TB between March
1998 and December 2001 at the Gastroenterology Department of Kartal
State Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey were evaluated prospectively.
Complete physical examination, medical and family history, blood
count erythrocyte sedimentation rate, routine biochemical tests,
Mantoux skin test, chest X-ray and abdominal ultrasonography (USG)
were performed in all cases, whereas microbiological examination of
ascites, upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, colonoscopy or barium
enema, abdominal tomography,
mediastinoscopy, laparoscopy or laparotomy
were done when needed.
RESULTS: The median age of patients (14 females,17 males) was 34.2
years (range 15-65 years). The most frequent symptoms were abdominal
pain and weight loss. Eleven patients had active pulmonary TB. The
most common abdominal USG findings were ascites and hepatomegaly.
Ascitic fluid analysis performed in 13 patients was found to be
exudative and acid resistant bacilli were present in smear and
cultured only in one patient with BacTec (3.2 %). Upper
gastrointestinal endoscopy yielded nonspecific findings in 16
patients. Colonoscopy performed in 20 patients showed ulcers in 9
(45 %), nodules in 2 (10 %) and, stricture, polypoid lesions,
granulomatous findings in terminal ileum and rectal fistula each in
one patient (5 %). Laparoscopy on 4 patients showed dilated bowel
loops, thickening in the mesentery, multiple ulcers and tubercles on
the peritoneum. Patients with abdominal TB were divided into three
groups according to the type of involvement. Fifteen patients (48 %)
had intestinal TB, 11 patients (35.2 %) had tuberculous peritonitis
and 5 (16.8 %) tuberculous lymphadenitis. The diagnosis of abdominal
TB was confirmed microbiologically in 5 (16 %) and histo-pathologically
in 19 patients (60.8 %). The remaining nine patients (28.8 %) had
been diagnosed by a positive response to antituberculous treatment.
CONCLUSION:
Neither clinical signs, laboratory, radiological and endoscopic
methods nor bacteriological and histopathological findings provide a
gold standard by themselves in the diagnosis of abdominal TB.
However, an algorithm of these diagnostic methods leads to
considerably higher precision in the diagnosis of this insidious
disease which primarily necessitate a clinical awareness of this
serious health problem.
Uygur-Bayramiçli
O, Dabak G, Dabak R. A clinical dilemma: abdominal tuberculosis.
World J Gastroenterol 2003;
9(5): 1098-1101
http://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/9/1098.asp
INTRODUCTION
Tuberculosis (TB) was a prevalent infection even in Ancient Greek
and Egypt. The disease could be taken under control only after the
advent of antimicrobial therapy in 1946. However, it has started to
resurge worldwide in the last 10 years, due to HIV epidemic and to
primary resistance to first-line drugs. One-third of the world
population is under the risk of acquiring TB according to WHO and
more than 30 million deaths had been expected due to TB in the
nineties especially in Africa and Asia[1]. Not
surprisingly, there is also an increase in the percentage of
patients with atypical presentations and atypical extra-pulmonary
forms of TB. Extra-pulmonary organ involvement of TB is estimated as
10-15 % of patients not infected with HIV whereas the frequency is
about 50-70 % in patients infected with HIV[2].
Abdominal TB is one of the most prevalent forms of
extra-pulmonary disease. Gastrointestinal involvement had been
reported to be 55-90 % in patients with active pulmonary TB before
the advent of specific anti-TB treatment. But it was regressed to 25
% after the development of specific drugs[3]. The
abdominal form of TB has an insidious course like any other chronic
infectious disease without any specific laboratory, radiological or
clinical findings. Due to this non-specificity there are great
difficulties in its diagnosis. Various methods of investigation had
been reported as the gold standard of diagnosis in earlier studies;
however there are great difficulties in clinical practice. As a
result, the diagnosis of abdominal TB is still a challenge to the
physician. In the present prospective study, we analyzed the
clinical, laboratory, radiologic, endoscopic and microbiological
features of abdominal TB patients in order to evaluate the
diagnostic value of various methods and to define the correct tool
of diagnosis.
MATERIALS
AND METHODS
Thirty-one patients were diagnosed as abdominal TB in
Gastroenterology Department of Kartal State Hospital-Istanbul,
between March 1998 and December 2001. On admission, every patient
had a complete physical examination, medical and family history,
blood count and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), routine
biochemical tests, Mantoux skin test, chest X-ray and abdominal
ultrasonography (USG). After these basic investigations, an algoritm
of diagnostic evaluation was applied according to the presence of
certain symptoms, namely, ascites, upper gastrointestinal symptoms,
chronic or bloody diarrhea, change in bowel habits, malabsorption,
and additional suspicious lesions in other body parts. If present,
ascites was taken for direct examination and culture for
Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Patients complaining of dyspepsia,
abdominal pain, vomiting, upper gastrointestinal bleeding or gastric
distention had an upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. 3 to 4 gastric
biopsies were routinely taken from corpus and antrum during the
endoscopy and the specimens were investigated for mycobacterium
tuberculosis or the presence of granulomas. If the patient had
symptoms suggestive of intestinal TB like chronic diarrhea, bloody
stools or change in bowel habit, stool was examined for bacilli and
culture for mycobacterium tuberculosis was done. Then, colonoscopy,
or in patients with problems of performing colonoscopy, barium enema
was performed. Eight to ten biopsies were taken for histopathologic
and microbiological examinations if any lesions were found present
during colonoscopy. Signs of small bowel involvement like
malabsorption were evaluated with small bowel series. Any
abnormality of abdominal organs, lymph nodes, mesentery and
peritoneum seen on abdominal USG examination was evaluated by
abdominal CT. Otherwise routine abdominal CT was not done. If
necessary for any additional suspected lesions, mediastinoscopy,
laparoscopy or laparotomy was also performed. In the presence of any
pathological findings, multiple biopsies were taken and sent for
bacteriological and histopathological investigations. A
microbiological diagnosis was attempted in all cases. However, in
some of the patients where no microbiological diagnosis could be met
despite every effort, the histopathological finding of typical
caseating granulomas was accepted as a definite evidence of TB. In
patients where none of the diagnosis was available and clinical
suspicion of abdominal TB was high, a therapeutic trial of anti-TB
treatment with four agents (Rifampicin, Ethambutol, Isoniazid and
Morphozinamide) was started, and response to treatment was evaluated
after three months.
We treated all patients with the standard four-drug regimens
(streptomycin or ethambutol, rifampin, pyrazinamide, isoniazid) for
9 months and the patients were reevaluated again at the end of this
time. If there was no resolution of symptoms and Mycobacterium
tuberculosis was still present in any specimen, an additional
9-months of treatment was given.
RESULTS
Thirty-one patients with abdominal TB (14 females, 17 males) with a
median age of 34.2 years (range 15-65 years) were diagnosed in 5
years. A past medical history of pulmonary TB was obtained in 6
patients (19.2 %) and of bone TB in 2 patients (6.4 %). There was a
family history of TB (in the first-degree relatives of index
patient) in 8 (25.6 %). The mean duration of symptoms showed great
variation among the patients (range l month-11 years).
The presenting symptoms and signs were summarized in Table 1.
Abdominal pain and weight loss appeared to be the most frequent
symptoms among these.
Laboratory investigations revealed anemia in 22 (70.4 %),
elevated ESR in 20 (64 %), and hypoalbuminaemia in 15 (48 %)
patients as the most prominent features. Other findings were
leucocytosis in 2 (6.4 %), positive CRP in 5 (16 %), elevated
transaminases in 7 patients (22.4 %). Of these 7 patients, 2 were
chronic HBV carriers, 1 was immune to HBV and 1 was anti-HCV
positive. In 4 patients (12.8 %), all laboratory examinations were
within normal limits.
Mantoux skin test was found positive in 6 (19.2 %) of the
patients. There was ascites in 13 (41.6 %). Ascitic fluid analysis
performed in those patients was found to be exudative in character
and only in one patient acid-fast bacilli (ARB) were present in
smear and cultured only in one patient with BacTec (3.2 %).
In 11 patients (35.2 %), chest X-ray showed lesions
compatible with active pulmonary TB, like fibrocavitary lesions,
effusions, or lymphadenopathies. Thorax CT was carried out on these
patients and lung lesions such as pleural involvement,
lymphadenopathy or nodular infiltration were present in all of them.
Thorax CT did not provide additional data in comparison to chest
X-ray.
Abdominal USG was performed on all patients except in five
because of technical problems due to recent operations. USG findings
of 26 patients were summarized in Table 2. Abdominal CT was
performed on 22 of these patients who presented with abnormal
findings in USG. Ascites in 8 (36.3 %), thickening of mesentery in 5
(22.7 %), abdominal lymphadenopathy in 3 (13.6 %), omental pathology
in 3 (13.6 %) and lymphadenopathy in liver hilum, cholelithiasis,
destruction in sacral bone, ovary cyst and splenomegaly each for one
(4.5 %) occasions had been observed as the most important CT
findings among these patients. Only 3 patients (13.6 %) presented
with completely normal CT examination.
Table 1 Presenting
symptoms (may be more than one in each patient) and signs and their
frequency in patients (n=32)
| Symptoms
and signs |
Number
of patients |
Percentage
(%) |
| Abdominal
pain |
16 |
51.2 |
| Weight
loss |
16 |
51.2 |
| Ascites |
12 |
38.4 |
| Diarrhea |
10 |
32 |
| Cough
and sputum |
6 |
19.2 |
| Vomiting
and nausea |
5 |
16 |
| Fever |
4 |
12.8 |
| Perforation |
3 |
9.6 |
| Bone
pain |
2 |
6.4 |
| Night
sweats |
2 |
6.4 |
| Urinary
symptoms |
1 |
3.2 |
| Mass
in the lower quadrant |
1 |
3.2 |
| Cervical
pain |
1 |
3.2 |
| Evisseration
following laparotomy |
1 |
3.2 |
| Incidental |
1 |
3.2 |
| Operation
because of brid ileus |
1 |
3.2 |
Table
2 Abdominal
ultrasonographic findings (may be more than one in each patient) and
their frequency in the patients (n=26)
| Abdominal
USG findings |
Number
of patients |
Percentage
(%) |
| Normal |
4 |
17.2 |
| Ascites |
14 |
53.2 |
| Hepatomegaly |
4 |
17.2 |
| Thickening |
3 |
11.4 |
| Atrophic |
2 |
7.6 |
| Abdominal |
2 |
7.6 |
| Hepatosteatosis |
2 |
7.6 |
| Splenomegaly |
1 |
3.8 |
| Pericardial |
1 |
3.8 |
| LAP |
1 |
3.8 |
| Calcifications |
1 |
3.8 |
Small bowel follow-up was done on seven patients and the
bowel was significantly shortened due to extensive resection because
of perforation in one of them. Barium enema was performed on two,
and there was irregularity and ulcers in the bowel wall of one
patient's.
Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy was performed in 17 patients
and showed nonspecific findings in 16. In every case, gastric
biopsies were taken but no acid- resistant bacilli (ARB) or
granulomas were identified in tissue sections.
Colonoscopy was performed in 20 patients. There was no
abnormality in 8 patients (40 %). Ulcers in 9 (45 %), nodules in 2
(10 %) and, stricture, polypoid lesions, granulomatous findings in
terminal ileum and rectal fistula each in one (5 %), occasions were
found in these patients.
Laparoscopy was performed on 4 patients and there were
positive findings in all of them. Dilated bowel loops, thickening in
the mesentery, multiple ulcers and tubercles on the peritoneum, each
for once, were observed in these patients. Peritoneal biopsies
confirmed the diagnosis of tuberculosis in three of these patients.
In the fourth patient, a peritoneal biopsy could not be taken
because of high bleeding risk due to a very long prothrombin time.
Mediastinoscopy in one patient, and fine needle aspiration
biopsy of the lymphadenopathy in liver hilum in another one were
performed to confirm the diagnosis. In only 2 patients of the whole
series, the diagnosis was clarified by biopsies taken in an
operation under general anesthesia (one was operated because of
bulging cervical disc and the other because of intestinal
obstruction).
Patients with abdominal TB were divided into three groups
according to the type of involvement. 15 patients (48 %) had
intestinal TB, 11 patients (35.2 %) tuberculous peritonitis and 5
(16.8 %) tuberculous lymphadenitis.
It wase able to confirm the diagnosis of abdominal
tuberculosis microbiologically in 5 patients (16 %). Two of these
patients were diagnosed by positive ARB smears of sputum, 1 with ARB
in enterocutaneous fistula discharge, 1 with ARB in ascitic fluid,
and 1 with ARB in biopsy material. Two patients were found positive
in BacTec, but none of these patients had positive culture on
L?wenstein medium. Nineteen patients (60.8 %) were diagnosed
histopathologically and the diagnosis in the remaining nine patients
(28.8 %) have been reached by a positive response to antituberculous
treatment. In 2 patients, there were both, histopathologic and
microbiologic diagnosis of tuberculosis.
Twenty-eight patients were symptom-free after 9 months of
treatment. Furthermore, no pathological findings were observed in
the next follow-up visits after six months. In the remaining 3
patients, the disease had a complicated course and although
antituberculous treatment with four agents (streptomycin or
ethambutol, rifampin, pyrazinamide, isoniazid) was begun, mammarian
abscess developed in one of them, osteomyelitis and enterocutaneous
fistula in the second patient, and incisional enterocutaneous
fistula in the last patient.
DISCUSSION
Abdominal TB is again on the rise all over the world with the
resurgence of multidrug resistant TB and with AIDS pandemic. It is
also an increasing health problem because of the immigrants from
underdeveloped countries where it is more common. However, this
topic is still restricted within a few paragraphs in the textbooks
and the current knowledge of abdominal TB has to be updated.
Sensitivity of various methods have already been speculated in
previous studies without any serious conclusion. In the present
study we aimed to investigate the relative reliability of these
tools in the diagnosis of abdominal TB which has an exceptionally
insidious course. As shown in the present study, the clinical and
laboratory features of abdominal TB are nonspecific and lead to the
suspicion of only a chronic infectious disease.
Three diagnostic stages have been evaluated in the diagnosis
of abdominal TB. The first two stages, clinical evaluation of the
patient and the radiologic examination, give indirect evidence of
the disease. The third stage includes the invasive techniques to
achieve direct evidence. However, the diagnosis of TB has its own
difficulties that these evidences generally come out to be
relatively direct in practice.
The vague character of symptoms has been previously defined
in many studies[4,5] and the radiographic presentation of
this disease which frequently mimics many other conditions has
already been described[6,7]. The combination of
mesenteric thickening of 15 mm with associated mesenteric
lymphadenopathy has been stated as a prominent sonographic finding
in abdominal TB[8,9] which could not be confirmed in our
study. We found rather nonspecific findings in abdominal
ultrasonography such as ascites and hepatomegaly. However, CT
features of abdominal TB have been reported to be of value in the
diagnosis[10] and the ability to differentiate TB
peritonitis from malignant diseases of the peritoneum could be
increased by combining some CT findings[11]. The same is
true for this study; we had a positive finding in 88 % of the
patients in abdominal CT. The results obtained on CT scans are
comparable to USG findings in the literature[4]. Thus
abdominal CT findings appear to provide more objective data about
the disease than other radiological methods.
The invasive diagnostic tools have the very real advantage of
examining the lesion itself either macroscopically or
microscopically. However, even these direct methods have their own
drawbacks in clinical practice.
Colonoscopic findings of abdominal TB are problematic because
of segmentary involvement of the disease[12] and because
of low yield of granulomas as a result of submucosal disease. In a
study of Singh and associates[13], granulomas were seen
in 44 % of the patients, and 19 % of them had caseation. We could
find colonoscopic abnormalities in 60 % of the patients and confirm
TB histopathologically. However, colonoscopy is still mandatory to
obtain tissue for culturing the agent which is very important for
the diagnosis of intestinalTB.
The sensitivity of endoscopic biopsy ranges between 30 and 80
% and Bhargawa et al[14] suggested obtaining 8 to 10
biopsies for histology and 3 to 4 specimens for culture.
In patients with palpable abdominal masses, direct fine
needle aspiration cytology can also be applied[5]. This
method is not feasible in any of our patients because we could not
palpate these masses in any of them.
Laparoscopic pattern and biopsies obtained from the
peritoneum have been reported to be more helpful and that this
finding could be used even for treating patients with abdominal TB
without any histopathologic or bacteriologic confirmation[15].
In the present study, laparoscopy was performed in 4 patients and
confirmed the diagnosis histopathologically in 3 and macroscopically
in one patient. Thus, it appeared to be a highly sensitive
diagnostic tool in all selected patients. In a study of Lisehora et
al[16], even mini laparotomy was reported as the most
sensitive and specific diagnostic procedure in abdominal TB.
The diagnosis of abdominal TB classically requires
microbiological and culture confirmation of mycobacterium
tuberculosis, whereas, the diagnosis can be established
histopathologically in many studies[4,15]. Also in the
current study, the diagnosis could be reached histopathologically in
60.8 % of the patients. If the isolation of Mycobacterium
tuberculosis is accepted as "sine qua non" for this
infectious disease according to the postulates of Koch,
histopathological diagnosis can not be regarded as standard.
However, microbiological isolation of the agent is very rare for
patients with abdominal TB. It has remained under 50 % in all the
reported series. Isolation of bacilli in endoscopic biopsy materials
has been postulated as even to be zero[12,13]. It is
known that Mycobacterium tuberculosis can be occasionally isolated
in stool of persons with healthy conditions. Therefore special
decontamination techniques and BacTec technology must be used for
culture of this agent[17]. Interestingly, we could not be
able to confirm the existence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in any
of our patients using LÖwenstein medium that was said to be the
ideal culture medium for this bacterium. Even in patients who were
ARB positive in direct smear, culture in LÖwenstein was not
positive; but we had culture positivity in two patients with BacTec
technique. In a case report of Anand and associates[17],
PCR was used on endoscopic biopsy specimens obtained from a patient
with chronic diarrhea and the result was found positive.
The isolation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis with BacTec or
PCR are promising methods for the future but even these methods
appear to be far from ideal since it is not enough for the treatment
of the disease because of the lack of culture. We think that we have
to refine our isolation procedures for the bacterium and in every
case of extrapulmonary TB, not only histopathological but also
microbiological confirmation should still be sought in order to
break the vicious circle of multidrug resistancy.
A past history of pulmonary TB or a family history of TB is
quite frequent in patients with abdominal TB[19] which is
also the case in our study. It is known that patients with multidrug
resistant organisms acquire the organisms through multiple
ineffective courses of treatment with various drugs[20].
Thus, it can be concluded that most of the cases with abdominal TB
have a primary resistance to conventional chemotherapy.
The isolation of mycobacterium tuberculosis is also essential
for susceptibility tests which are now performed on every patient
with pulmonary TB because of the high incidence of multidrug
resistance (it has increased from 2 % to 9 % in the past three
decades)[20].
Based upon our clinical observation with abdominal TB, we can
stress on these patient with high resistance because of the long
course of the disease and because of frequency of complications. If
a better way of isolating the organism cannot be found and if the
resistance cannot be detected before starting with the
antituberculous treatment, the increase of new TB cases will be
inevitable. The problem of mutant strains could also be expected in
the future. It is known that two different mutant strains can
coexist in the same patient which further complicates the resistance
problem. Although the molecular fingerprinting of mycobacterium
tuberculosis may help to solve these problems in some extent[21],
these facts should be taken into consideration for future directions
in the diagnosis and treatment of abdominal TB.
CONCLUSION
Neither clinical signs, laboratory, radiological and endoscopic
methods nor bacteriological and histopathological findings provide a
gold standard by themselves in the diagnosis of abdominal TB.
However, an algorithm of these diagnostic methods leads to
considerably higher precision in the diagnosis of this insidious
disease which primarily necessitate a clinical awareness of this
serious health problem.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
We are grateful to Mehmet Bayramiçli, M.D. for his assistance
in preparation of the manuscript.
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Edited
by Xu
XQ
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