Publication | Open Access
Tuberculosis in Otorhinolaryngology: Clinical Presentation and Diagnostic Challenges
39
Citations
9
References
2011
Year
Pulmonary TuberculosisExtrapulmonary TuberculosisPulmonary PathologyTuberculosis AccountingTuberculosis PreventionSurgical PathologyOtolaryngologyOtorhinolaryngologyPathologyTuberculosisClinical PresentationDiagnosticsTuberculosis DiagnosticsHistology-proven TuberculosisMedicine
Tuberculosis affects all tissues of the body, although some more commonly than the others. Pulmonary tuberculosis is the most common type of tuberculosis accounting for approximately 80% of the tuberculosis cases. Tuberculosis of the otorhinolaryngeal region is one of the rarer forms of extrapulmonary tuberculosis but still poses a significant clinical and diagnostic challenge. Over three years, only five out of 121 patients suspected to have tuberculosis of the otorhinolaryngeal region (cervical adenitis excluded) had Mycobacterium tuberculosis culture-proven disease. Additional 7 had histology-proven tuberculosis. Only one patient had concomitant sputum-positive pulmonary tuberculosis. We look at the various clinical and laboratory aspects of tuberculosis of the otorhinolaryngeal region that would help to diagnose this uncommon but important form of extrapulmonary tuberculosis.
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