4.6 Article

Differential Diagnosis of Abdominal Tuberculosis in the Adult-Literature Review

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics11122362

Keywords

tuberculosis; differential; diagnosis; peritonitis; lymphadenopathy; granuloma; nodules; cyst; laparotomy; laparoscopy

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Tuberculosis is a major public health issue in developing countries, with abdominal TB being difficult to detect and diagnose due to non-specific symptoms. This study identified key features and challenges in diagnosing abdominal TB, emphasizing the importance of appropriate workups in endemic regions for suspected cases presenting with peritonitis, lymphadenopathy, or organ lesions at the intestinal or solid organ level.
Tuberculosis (TB) is a public health issue that affects mostly, but not exclusively, developing countries. Abdominal TB is difficult to detect at first, with the incidence ranging from 10% to 30% of individuals with lung TB. Symptoms are non-specific, examinations can be misleading, and biomarkers commonly linked with other diseases can also make appropriate diagnosis difficult. As a background for this literature review, the method used was to look into the main characteristics and features of abdominal tuberculosis that could help with differentiation on the PubMed, Science Direct, and Academic Oxford Journals databases. The results were grouped into three categories: A. general features (the five forms of abdominal tuberculosis: wet and dry peritonitis, lymphadenopathy, lesions at the level of the cavitary organs, lesions at the level of the solid organs), B. different intra-abdominal organs and patterns of involvement (oesophageal, gastro-duodenal, jejunal, ileal, colorectal, hepatosplenic, and pancreatic TB with calcified lymphadenopathy, also with description of extraperitoneal forms), and C. special challenges of the differential diagnosis in abdominal TB (such as diagnostic overlap, the disease in transplant candidates and transplant recipients, and zoonotic TB). The study concluded that, particularly in endemic countries, any disease manifesting with peritonitis, lymphadenopathy, or lesions at the level of the intestines or solid organs should have workups and protocols applied that can confirm/dismiss the suspicion of abdominal tuberculosis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available