ABSTRACT
La tuberculosis extra pulmonar osteoarticular es una entidad infrecuente (16%), y aquellas de compromiso extravertebral son a su vez muy infrecuentes. Presentamos el caso clínico de un paciente masculino de 68 años de edad, con hipertensión arterial sistémica y enfermedad renal crónica, que presenta aproximadamente 1 año de evolución tórpida con dolor en retropié izquierdo, empeorando luego de infiltración con esteroide, con aumento de volumen, limitación funcional, y lesión ulcerosa con exudado purulento en cara medial. Siendo evaluado de forma clínica y con estudios de imagen por diferentes facultativos, hasta realizar toma de biopsia y cultivo óseo con diagnóstico de Tuberculosis ósea en calcáneo izquierdo. Tratado de manera quirúrgica, y actualmente cumpliendo tratamiento antituberculoso, con evolución satisfactoria recuperando movilidad articular, sin dolor y disminución del volumen de retropié(AU)
Osteoarticular extrapulmonary tuberculosis is a rare entity (16%), and those with extravertebral involvement are in turn very rare. We present the clinical case of a 68-years-old male patient with systemic arterial hypertension and chronic kidney disease, who presents approximately 1 year of torpid evolution with pain in the left hindfoot, worsening after steroid infiltration, with increased volume, limitation functional, and ulcerative lesion with purulent exudate on the medial side. He was being evaluated clinically and with imaging studies by different doctors, until taking a biopsy and bone culture with a diagnosis of Bone Tuberculosis in the left calcaneus. Surgically treated, and currently undergoing antituberculous treatment, with satisfactory evolution recovering joint mobility, without pain and decrease in rearfoot volume(AU)
Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Aged , Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular/pathology , Calcaneus , Renal Insufficiency, ChronicABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE AND MATERIALS: This research evaluates the presence and chronology of tuberculosis (TB) in the northeastern highlands of Peru (CE 800-1535) through the analysis of osseous lesions from Pre-Contact Kuelap, Chachapoyas. METHODS: We examined macroscopic lesion morphology and distribution from the skeletal series (MNI = 207). RESULTS: We determined that skeletal evidence was highly consistent with advanced multifocal and spinal tuberculosis in 13 individuals. Destructive lesions of the lower thoracic and/or lumbar vertebra bodies and sacroiliac joints are evident in most cases, but we also observed lesions within the manubriosternal, hip, and knee joints. Both adult males (n = 7) and females (n = 6) present skeletal lesions from young adult to older adults, but there is only one late adolescent. Only three individuals demonstrate similar lesion distributions. CONCLUSIONS: Variation in lesion distribution in this population-based study shows the importance of identifying extra-vertebral tuberculosis and suggests that the disease may have manifested differently than at other coastal sites. These cases confirm the presence of tuberculosis both before and after Inca occupation across this central Andean highlands region. SIGNIFICANCE: This evidence for the likely endemic presence of TB in the New World prior to European Contact furthers our understanding of the distribution of this infectious disease across the region as well as elucidating lesion distribution. LIMITATIONS: The diagnosis of tuberculosis is based on skeletal lesions and it should be confirmed by molecular analysis. FUTURE RESEARCH: Additional examination of vertebral bodies (including juvenile remains) for evidence of earlier manifestations of infection.