A diagnosis of disseminated tuberculosis based on knee arthroscopic guided synovial biopsy in the context of monoarthritis.
Authors
Sílvia Fernandes; Elsa Vieira-Sousa ; Carolina Furtado; Adília Costa; Rita Barros; João Eurico Fonseca;
Accounting for 2.2-4.7% of all tuberculosis cases in Europe and USA and around 10-15% of extra-pulmonary tuberculosis cases, osteoarticular tuberculosis tends to be chronic, slowly progressive and destructive.
We report the case of an 81-year-old male with 3 weeks of progressively worsening pain, swelling and limited range of motion of the left knee. A knee arthroscopy was performed for synovial biopsy at our department revealing diffuse synovitis with scarce villi formation. The positive polymerase chain reaction assay for Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the synovial tissue allowed the establishment of the diagnosis and synovium histology showed caseating granulomas.
A lengthy delay between first symptoms of osteoarticular tuberculosis and the beginning of treatment has been reported. A high index of suspicion, synovial membrane biopsy and appropriate microbiologic testing are fundamental to avoid a delay in diagnosis.
Sílvia Fernandes
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre
Elsa Vieira-Sousa
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre
Carolina Furtado
Hospital do Divino Espirito Santo, Açores, Portugal
Adília Costa
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre
Rita Barros
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre
João Eurico Fonseca
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre
Elsa Vieira-Sousa
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre
Carolina Furtado
Hospital do Divino Espirito Santo, Açores, Portugal
Adília Costa
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre
Rita Barros
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre
João Eurico Fonseca
Hospital de Santa Maria, CHLN, Lisboa, Lisbon Academic Medical Centre