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Journal ArticleDOI

Cutaneous tuberculosis: diagnosis and treatment.

TLDR
Diagnosis of cutaneous tuberculosis is challenging and requires the correlation of clinical findings with diagnostic testing; in addition to traditional AFB smears and cultures, there has been increased utilization of PCR because of its rapidity, sensitivity and specificity.
Abstract
As we move into the 21st century, cutaneous tuberculosis has re-emerged in areas with a high incidence of HIV infection and multi-drug resistant pulmonary tuberculosis. Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium bovis, and the BCG vaccine cause tuberculosis involving the skin. True cutaneous tuberculosis lesions can be acquired either exogenously or endogenously, show a wide spectrum of morphology and M. tuberculosis can be diagnosed by acid-fast bacilli (AFB) stains, culture or polymerase chain reaction (PCR). These lesions include tuberculous chancre, tuberculosis verrucosa cutis, lupus vulgaris, scrofuloderma, orificial tuberculosis, miliary tuberculosis, metastatic tuberculosis abscess and most cases of papulonecrotic tuberculid. The tuberculids, like cutaneous tuberculosis, show a wide spectrum of morphology but M. tuberculosis is not identified by AFB stains, culture or PCR. These lesions include lichen scrofulosorum, nodular tuberculid, most cases of nodular granulomatous phlebitis, most cases of erythema induratum of Bazin and some cases of papulonecrotic tuberculid. Diagnosis of cutaneous tuberculosis is challenging and requires the correlation of clinical findings with diagnostic testing; in addition to traditional AFB smears and cultures, there has been increased utilization of PCR because of its rapidity, sensitivity and specificity. Since most cases of cutaneous tuberculosis are a manifestation of systemic involvement, and the bacillary load in cutaneous tuberculosis is usually less than in pulmonary tuberculosis, treatment regimens are similar to that of tuberculosis in general. In the immunocompromised, such as an HIV infected patient with disseminated miliary tuberculosis, rapid diagnosis and prompt initiation of treatment are paramount. Unfortunately, despite even the most aggressive efforts, the prognosis in these individuals is poor when multi-drug resistant mycobacterium are present. An increased awareness of the re-emergence of cutaneous tuberculosis will allow for the proper diagnosis and management of this increasingly common skin disorder.

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Citations
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Extrapulmonary tuberculosis: an overview

TL;DR: Treatment for these types of tuberculosis does not differ from treatment regimens for pulmonary forms of the same disease, and any extension of this period is advisable solely in tuberculosis affecting the central nervous system and in Pott’s disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical manifestations of tuberculosis in children.

TL;DR: The natural history and clinical manifestations of tuberculosis in children differ significantly from those of the disease seen in adults, and the diagnosis of tuberculosis is often based upon a positive skin test, epidemiological information, and compatible clinical and radiographic presentation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cutaneous mycobacterial infections.

TL;DR: Cutaneous tuberculosis exhibits different clinical phenotypes acquired through different routes, including via extrinsic inoculation of the tuberculous bacilli and dissemination to the skin from other sites, or represents hypersensitivity reactions to M. tuberculosis infection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cutaneous tuberculosis: epidemiologic, etiopathogenic and clinical aspects - Part I

TL;DR: The current knowledge about this disease's physiopathology and immunology is revised as well as detailing the possible clinical presentations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tuberculosis extrapulmonar, una revisión

TL;DR: La mayoria de las veces es necesario recurrir a pruebas diagnosticas invasivas como PAAF guiada con ecografia o TAC, para la recoleccion de muestras biologicas para su diagnostico.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Treatment of tuberculosis and tuberculosis infection in adults and children. American Thoracic Society and The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

TL;DR: Treatment of Tuberculosis should be individualized and based on susceptibility studies, except for children who have miliary tuberculosis, bone/joint tuberculosis, or tuberculous meningitis who should receive a minimum of 12 mo of therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Takayasu's arteritis. Clinical study of 107 cases.

TL;DR: The clinical experience derived from the retrospective study of 107 cases of TA over a 19 year period is presented, and it is suggested that tuberculosis may play an important role in the etiology of TA.
Journal Article

Cutaneous tuberculosis: a twenty-year prospective study.

TL;DR: In this paper, a study of patients atteints of tuberculose cutanee who had frequented l'hopital of soins tertiaire dans le Nord de l'Inde between 1975 and 1995 is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Childhood cutaneous tuberculosis: a study over 25 years from northern India.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse the pattern of childhood cutaneous tuberculosis prevailing in northern India over the past 25 years and to highlight differences from and similarities to adult tuberculosis, where the majority of the children, 41 (54.7%) were in the 10-14-year age group.
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