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Cutaneous tuberculosis: A clinical, histopathologic, and bacteriologic study

Background: In recent years cutaneous infections with Mycobacterium tuberculosis with an atypical clinical appearance have become more common because of the increasing number of immunocompromised patients. Objective: We report the clinical, histopathologic, and bacteriologic data of 11 patients with...

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Published in:Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology 1995, Vol.33 (3), p.433-440
Main Authors: del Carmen Fariña, M, Gegundez, M.Isabel, Piqué, Enric, Esteban, Jaime, Martín, Lucía, Requena, Luis, Barat, Antonio, Guerrero, Manuel Fernández
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c396t-9bbc50bad2d40d2faf413a62bce207e1d0ca8faf11a5ae6d18d5f8b38c381c363
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container_title Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology
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creator del Carmen Fariña, M
Gegundez, M.Isabel
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Esteban, Jaime
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Requena, Luis
Barat, Antonio
Guerrero, Manuel Fernández
description Background: In recent years cutaneous infections with Mycobacterium tuberculosis with an atypical clinical appearance have become more common because of the increasing number of immunocompromised patients. Objective: We report the clinical, histopathologic, and bacteriologic data of 11 patients with several forms of cutaneous tuberculosis seen during the past 14 years. Methods: Patients from whom M tuberculosis was isolated from culture of skin biopsy specimens, sinus drainage, or material aspirated from cutaneous abscesses were included. In all but two patients a biopsy specimen was obtained for histopathologic study. All but one patient received combined antituberculous therapy. Results: The clinical diagnoses were scrofuloderma (four cases), cutaneous miliary tuberculosis (two), lupus vulgaris (two), tuberculous gumma (two), and one unclassified. All but three patients had evidence of either previous or simultaneous tuberculous foci other than in the skin. Histopathologic findings varied according to the type of cutaneous tuberculosis. Conclusion: In some patients with cutaneous tuberculosis, lesions are atypical in appearance because of immunodeficiency. Culture for M. tuberculosis should be performed in all suspected cases, even in those in whom special stains for acid-fast bacilli are negative.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/0190-9622(95)91389-0
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Objective: We report the clinical, histopathologic, and bacteriologic data of 11 patients with several forms of cutaneous tuberculosis seen during the past 14 years. Methods: Patients from whom M tuberculosis was isolated from culture of skin biopsy specimens, sinus drainage, or material aspirated from cutaneous abscesses were included. In all but two patients a biopsy specimen was obtained for histopathologic study. All but one patient received combined antituberculous therapy. Results: The clinical diagnoses were scrofuloderma (four cases), cutaneous miliary tuberculosis (two), lupus vulgaris (two), tuberculous gumma (two), and one unclassified. All but three patients had evidence of either previous or simultaneous tuberculous foci other than in the skin. Histopathologic findings varied according to the type of cutaneous tuberculosis. Conclusion: In some patients with cutaneous tuberculosis, lesions are atypical in appearance because of immunodeficiency. 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Objective: We report the clinical, histopathologic, and bacteriologic data of 11 patients with several forms of cutaneous tuberculosis seen during the past 14 years. Methods: Patients from whom M tuberculosis was isolated from culture of skin biopsy specimens, sinus drainage, or material aspirated from cutaneous abscesses were included. In all but two patients a biopsy specimen was obtained for histopathologic study. All but one patient received combined antituberculous therapy. Results: The clinical diagnoses were scrofuloderma (four cases), cutaneous miliary tuberculosis (two), lupus vulgaris (two), tuberculous gumma (two), and one unclassified. All but three patients had evidence of either previous or simultaneous tuberculous foci other than in the skin. Histopathologic findings varied according to the type of cutaneous tuberculosis. Conclusion: In some patients with cutaneous tuberculosis, lesions are atypical in appearance because of immunodeficiency. 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subjects Abscess - microbiology
Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Bacterial diseases
Biological and medical sciences
Female
Giant Cells - pathology
Human bacterial diseases
Humans
Immunocompromised Host
Infectious diseases
Langerhans Cells - pathology
Lupus Vulgaris - microbiology
Lupus Vulgaris - pathology
Lymphocytes - pathology
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Mycobacterium tuberculosis - isolation & purification
Neutrophils - pathology
Tuberculoma - pathology
Tuberculosis and atypical mycobacterial infections
Tuberculosis, Cutaneous - microbiology
Tuberculosis, Cutaneous - pathology
Tuberculosis, Lymph Node - microbiology
Tuberculosis, Lymph Node - pathology
Tuberculosis, Miliary - microbiology
Tuberculosis, Miliary - pathology
Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular - microbiology
Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular - pathology
title Cutaneous tuberculosis: A clinical, histopathologic, and bacteriologic study
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