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Case Report: Chest Wall Tuberculosis without Pulmonary Involvement in Three Pediatric Immunocompetent Patients
Author(s) -
Napoleón González Saldaña,
Mercedes Macías Parra,
Eduardo Arias de la Garza,
Sara Solórzano Morales,
Diego Galvis Trujillo,
Hugo Juárez Olguı́n,
Ana Jocelyn Carmona Vargas,
Martin Eduardo Palavicini Rueda,
José Iván Castillo Bejarano
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
american journal of tropical medicine and hygiene
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.015
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1476-1645
pISSN - 0002-9637
DOI - 10.4269/ajtmh.19-0374
Subject(s) - medicine , presentation (obstetrics) , extrapulmonary tuberculosis , tuberculosis , epidemiology , surgery , chest pain , disease , soft tissue , pulmonary tuberculosis , dermatology , radiology , mycobacterium tuberculosis , pathology
Primary rib cage tuberculosis (TB) is an infrequent form of presentation and represents 1% of all cases of osteoarticular TB. We report three cases of children who were previously healthy and who began with swelling of the anterior surface of the rib as initial manifestation of TB. The most important clinical presentations in this series were swelling and pain, with lytic lesions and a soft tissue mass in image studies simulating oncologic pathologies. Because none of the cases had positive epidemiological contact, TB was initially not considered, so the delay in diagnosis from the onset of symptoms was 4, 1, and 2 months, respectively. The diagnosis was made through histomorphological analyses. Treatment was administered during 12, 10, and 9 months. Posttreatment studies did not show any evidence of extrapulmonary TB and until date, the patients remained without relapse or active disease. The findings in our cases illustrate that the diagnosis of chest wall TB should be suspected in all patients from endemic areas who present rib injury.

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