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[Lingual tuberculosis revealing disseminated tuberculosis]

Authors :
M, Vidal
I, Delevaux
M, André
I, Marroun
F, Gavet
H, Voinchet
S, Palat
R, Kintossou
L, Gilain
O, Aumaître
Source :
La Revue de medecine interne. 28(2)
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Tuberculous lesions of the oral cavity are uncommon. Most of cases are secondary to pulmonary disease and the primary form is rare.We report the case of a 64 year-old man, smoker, presenting a chronic ulcer of the tongue, with anorexia and important weight loss. The biopsy of this ulcer showed granulomatous inflammation and Langhans type giant cells, without necrosis. Ziehl-Nielsen stain was negative. Pulmonary lesions were subsequently detected (chest X-ray, CT-scan) and the disseminated tuberculosis was confirmed by a positive culture with acid-fast bacilli in urine, blood, and pulmonary sample. Antituberculosis treatment resulted in the complete resolution of the oral lesion.Biopsy for histopathological diagnosis, acid-fast stains and culture, is essential to determine the exact nature of chronic oral ulceration to distinguish between oral malignancy, infectious (syphilis), traumatic, or aphthous ulcers. Tuberculosis of the tongue is a difficult diagnosis. However it should be searched for because treatment usually results in a rapid recovery.

Details

Language :
French
ISSN :
02488663
Volume :
28
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
La Revue de medecine interne
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........121bb61f3087867df8c181d1341c62a2