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A Case of Lupus vulgaris Successfully Treated with Antituberculous Therapy despite Negative PCR and Culture
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Citations
7
References
2005
Year
Pulmonary TuberculosisLupus VulgarisSystemic Lupus Erythematosus TreatmentLupusLupus NephritisPathogenesisHistopathologyNegative PcrPathologyTuberculosisDermatologyTuberculosis DiagnosticsDermatopathologyMedicineHuman PathologyAntituberculous Therapy14-Year-old BoyPink Firm Plaque
A 14-year-old boy presented with a pink firm plaque with well-defined borders in the right infra-orbital skin area. On diascopy, the infiltrate exhibited a typical apple-jelly appearance. No acid-fast bacilli could be demonstrated. A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay did not reveal the presence of mycobacteria in a lesional biopsy sample. Culture of biopsied tissue on Loewenstein-Jensen medium was negative. Although the tuberculosis culture and PCR did not confirm tuberculosis, a diagnosis of lupus vulgaris was made considering the clinical and histopathological findings. After a 9-month antituberculous therapy, the lesion disappeared. We believe that a diagnosis of lupus vulgaris still depends more on clinical and histopathological findings than on tuberculosis culture or PCR.
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