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Sacral Tuberculosis: Never Ignore Buttock Pain
Author(s) -
Mohd Hazwan Bin Maz,
Khairul Abdillah Bin Mohamad,
Siti Zulaifah Binti Che Saidi,
Lim Han Sim,
Ahmad Sabri Omar
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
asian journal of medicine and biomedicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2600-8173
DOI - 10.37231/ajmb.2021.5.1.424
Subject(s) - tuberculosis , medicine , lumbosacral joint , back pain , mycobacterium tuberculosis , low back pain , surgery , pediatrics , pathology , alternative medicine
A last few decade, case of infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB) is increasing.  TB infection of other than pulmonary is quite challenging to diagnose due to non-specific signs and symptoms (Wellons III et al., 2004). Spine being the commonest site of skeletal TB which account approximately 50% from reported cases (Tuli, 2002). Spinal TB can be associated with pulmonary infection, however in less than 1% of cases, it occurs in the absence of pulmonary involvement (Davidson & Horowitz, 1970; Gorse, Pais, Kusske, & Cesario, 1983; Omari, Robertson, Nelson, & Chiu, 1989; Rezai, Lee, Cooper, Errico, & Koslow, 1995). TB infection involving the lumbosacral junction is uncommon, only 2 to 3% from all cases of spinal TB (Ahmadi, Bajaj, Destian, Segall, & Zee, 1993; Dayras, Lorilloux, Hugonet, & Benichou, 1985; MANSBERG, ROWE, & WALKER, 1991; Pun et al., 1990; Rajasekaran et al., 1998). Isolated sacral TB is rare entity, The patient usually presented with lower back pain with or without neurological involvement (Patankar et al., 2000). Here we presented a case of sacral TB which not associated with neurological impairment.

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