Biopsy-proved abdominal tuberculosis in Tabriz
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Background - Because of the increasing incidence of tuberculosis, the growing number of extrapulmonary cases, and paucity of information about abdominal tuberculosis we performed this study on biopsy-proved abdominal tuberculosis cases in the past 15 years in Tabriz. Methods - The medical records of all tuberculosis patients admitted to Tabriz Tuberculosis Center between the years 1984 and 1999 were reviewed and biopsy-proved abdominal cases were selected for a descriptive cross-sectional study. Results - Among 4,693 new cases of tuberculosis in a 15-year period, abdominal tuberculosis was the 5th common type of TB in Tabriz and 77 biopsy-proved cases were selected for the study. Eighty-seven percent of the patients were females. The mean age of the patients was 34 آ± 16 years (age range: 13-75 years). The peak incidence was seen in the second, third, and fourth decades of life (28%, 27%, and 23%, respectively). The most common complaints were abdominal pain (57%), abdominal swelling (16%), and infertility (9%). The sites of involvement were peritoneum (56%), peritoneum plus genitalia (6.5%), mesenteric lymph nodes (6.5%), peritoneum plus abdominal lymph nodes (2.6%), cecum (2.6%), esophagus (2.6%), gallbladder (2.6%) and a combination of intraabdominal or intra/extraabdominal organs. Before 1991, the majority of patients were treated with isoniazid (INH) + rifampicin (RMP) +ethambutol (ETB) or streptomycin (SM); since then, the treatment has changed to the standard 6-month regimen with 4 drugs. Overall, treatment regimens were INH + RMP + ETB (48%), INH + RMP + ETB + PZA (44%), and INH + RMP + SM (8%). Conclusion - In this study, abdominal tuberculosis was more common in females than males and 7% of our patients were referred due to infertility. Applying more stringent criteria for diagnosis of abdominal TB and availability of noninvasive or less-invasive diagnostic methods may change our results in the future.
Description
Keywords
ethambutol, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, rifampicin, streptomycin, abdominal infection, abdominal pain, abdominal swelling, adolescent, adult, age distribution, aged, article, cecum disease, controlled study, diagnostic procedure, esophagus disease, extrapulmonary tuberculosis, female, gallbladder disease, genital system disease, gynecologic disease, hospital admission, human, incidence, infertility, Iran, major clinical study, male, medical record, mesenteric lymphadenitis, needle biopsy, peritoneum, retrospective study, sex ratio, tuberculous lymphadenitis