Tuberculosis revisted: classic imaging findings in childhood

Author:

Mahomed NasreenORCID,Kilborn TracyORCID,Smit Elsabe JacobaORCID,Chu Winnie Chiu WingORCID,Young Catherine Yee Man,Koranteng NoncebaORCID,Kasznia-Brown JoannaORCID,Winant Abbey J.,Lee Edward Y.,Sodhi Kushaljit SinghORCID

Abstract

AbstractTuberculosis (TB) remains one of the major public health threats worldwide, despite improved diagnostic and therapeutic methods. Tuberculosis is one of the main causes of infectious disease in the chest and is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality in paediatric populations, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Due to the difficulty in obtaining microbiological confirmation of pulmonary TB in children, diagnosis often relies on a combination of clinical and radiological findings. The early diagnosis of central nervous system TB is challenging with presumptive diagnosis heavily reliant on imaging. Brain infection can present as a diffuse exudative basal leptomeningitis or as localised disease (tuberculoma, abscess, cerebritis). Spinal TB may present as radiculomyelitis, spinal tuberculoma or abscess or epidural phlegmon. Musculoskeletal manifestation accounts for 10% of extrapulmonary presentations but is easily overlooked with its insidious clinical course and non-specific imaging findings. Common musculoskeletal manifestations of TB include spondylitis, arthritis and osteomyelitis, while tenosynovitis and bursitis are less common. Abdominal TB presents with a triad of pain, fever and weight loss. Abdominal TB may occur in various forms, as tuberculous lymphadenopathy or peritoneal, gastrointestinal or visceral TB. Chest radiographs should be performed, as approximately 15% to 25% of children with abdominal TB have concomitant pulmonary infection. Urogenital TB is rare in children. This article will review the classic radiological findings in childhood TB in each of the major systems in order of clinical prevalence, namely chest, central nervous system, spine, musculoskeletal, abdomen and genitourinary system. Graphical Abstract

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Current and evolving directions in childhood tuberculosis imaging;Pediatric Radiology;2023-12-30

2. ResMultNet-50: An Automatic Medical Image Diagnosis Approach for Lung Diseases Using Deep Transfer Learning;2023 International Conference on Information and Communication Technology for Development for Africa (ICT4DA);2023-10-26

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