J R Soc Med 2003;96:586-588
doi:10.1258/jrsm.96.12.586
© 2003 Royal Society of Medicine
Diagnosis of abdominal tuberculosis: the importance of laparoscopy
S Rai MS FRCS
W M Thomas MD FRCS
Department of General Surgery, Leicester General Hospital, Gwendolen
Road, Leicester LE5 4PW, UK
Correspondence to: Mr Sajal Rai, 27 Hambledon Drive, Wollaton, Nottingham NG8
1LG, UKE-mail:
sajal_rai{at}hotmail.com
 |
SUMMARY
|
|---|
Abdominal tuberculosis (TB) tends to present with non-specific
features and
can be hard to diagnose. In the University Hospitals
of Leicester, which serve
a large immigrant population, 36 patients
had this diagnosis between 1995 and
2001. We examined their
records to identify features, including history,
clinical presentation,
investigations and diagnostic procedures, that might
help with
diagnosis of future cases.
32 of the patients were of Asian origin, predominantly from the Indian
subcontinent. The most common presenting complaints were abdominal pain and
weight loss. On clinical examination the findings were non-specific. Only 2
patients were found to have concurrent pulmonary TB. The most consistent
laboratory finding (>90%) was a low haemoglobin with a raised C-reactive
protein. The tuberculin test (Mantoux) was positive in only 7 patients (22%),
and ZiehlNeelsen staining of ascitic fluid was negative in all 11
patients in whom it was examined. An ultrasound scan of the abdomen revealed
findings consistent with TB in 9/28 patients and a CT scan was helpful in
6/11. Laparoscopy, although usually performed as a last resort, proved the
most effective investigation, yielding the diagnosis in 23 (92%) of the 25
patients in whom it was performed.
In patients with the relevant background and clinical history, laparoscopy
is the investigation of choice.
 |
INTRODUCTION
|
|---|
Abdominal tuberculosis (TB) is uncommon in Europe and America
but is
encountered with increasing frequency by hospitals that
serve growing
immigrant populations. The clinical presentation
tends to be non-specific,
with abdominal pains and general
complaints,
1 and the
differential diagnosis will often include inflammatory
bowel disease,
malignancy or some other
infection.
2 Prompt
diagnosis
allows an early start to anti-TB therapy, with advantages for
the
patient and savings to the health system. We therefore examined
the records of
patients treated in Leicester to identify clinical
features and investigative
methods that might help with diagnosis
of future cases.
 |
PATIENTS AND METHODS
|
|---|
A total of 36 patients with documented diagnosis of abdominal
TB were
identified with the help of the medical records departments
of the University
Hospitals of Leicester. These patients had
presented between 1995 and 2001.
The clinical records were then
analysed for details of history, clinical
signs, investigations
and diagnostic procedures.
 |
RESULTS
|
|---|
24 patients were male, 12 female, mean age 43 years (range 2785).
32
were of Asian origin, 3 European and 1 Afro-Caribbean.
Presenting features
Abdominal pain and pronounced weight loss were the predominant presenting
complaints, followed by loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea
(Table 1). Just over half the
patients also reported fever and night sweats. The mean duration of the
presenting complaint was about 18 weeks (range 1 week to 2 years). Only 11
patients gave a relevant history of TB, 2 of whom were receiving treatment for
pulmonary TB at the time. A further 9 reported possible contact with TB in the
past. 28 patients were immigrants from the Indian subcontinent, 5 were
immigrants from Africa, and 1 each originated from Greece, Malaysia and the
UK. Of 23 patients who had been abroad since immigration to the UK, 7 had
travelled in the past year, mainly to the Indian subcontinent and Africa.
Clinical features
Generalized abdominal tenderness was the most common clinical finding but 3
had no abdominal signs at all. 14 patients were pyrexial, 8 had clinical
evidence of ascites and 4 had a suggestion of an abdominal mass. Only 1
patient presented with clinical evidence of bowel obstruction.
The possibility of abdominal TB was noted at presentation in 20 patients.
Intra-abdominal malignancy (10), inflammatory bowel disease (4), hepatitis,
chronic pancreatitis, peptic ulcer, gastrointestinal bleed and anorexia
nervosa were some of the other possibilities considered in the differential
diagnosis.
Investigations
A low haemoglobin and a raised C-reactive protein (CRP) was the most
consistent finding (>90%). Chest X-ray signs were seen in 10 patients but
were specific for pulmonary TB in only 2. Abdominal X-ray signs were detected
in only 5 patients (none specific for TB). Liver function tests and white cell
count were of no positive diagnostic significance. A Mantoux (tuberculin) test
suggestive of TB was positive in only 22% of the 32 patients in whom it was
performed. An ultrasound scan of the abdomen was performed in 28 patients,
with findings suggestive of TB in 9 of these patients (fibrinous strands in
ascitic fluid, localized ascites, calcified lymph nodes). 11 others were found
to have ascites but no specific features. A CT scan of the abdomen, done in 11
patients, revealed findings consistent with abdominal TB in 6 (adenopathy
predominantly in the retroperitoneal and mesenteric compartments,
splenomegaly, ascites, ileocaecal mass). Staining of the ascitic fluid for
acid-fast bacilli (ZiehlNeelsen) was performed in 11 cases and was
negative in all. Specimens of sputum, urine and pleural fluid likewise gave
negative results, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis was seen in only two
of the tissue specimens obtained laparoscopically or under imaging guidance.
Laparoscopy was performed in 25 of the 36 patients and was diagnostic in 23
(92%). Of the remaining two laparoscopies, one was unsuccessful because
adhesions prevented creation of a pneumoperitoneum and the other was reported
as normal. In the latter case a subsequent CT scan of the abdomen revealed
retroperitoneal lymph nodes that on biopsy were found to be tuberculous. Of
the 23 patients with positive laparoscopies, all but one had the diagnosis
confirmed by laparoscopic biopsy of intra-abdominal lymph nodes or
omental/peritoneal tuberculous nodules. In the remaining patient the diagnosis
was established on visual findings alone since biopsy of a serosal nodule was
deemed too risky. The investigation was usually performed as a last resort, in
one case 145 days after presentation. In 9 of the 11 patients who did not have
a laparoscopy, we judged that this investigation would have yielded an earlier
diagnosis or avoided the need for laparotomy.
 |
DISCUSSION
|
|---|
Abdominal TB should be considered in the differential diagnosis
for
patients who originate from or have travelled recently to
countries where TB
is endemic, and who present with non-specific
abdominal complaints and weight
loss over a long
period.
3 The
findings
of the present study confirm earlier reports on the difficulties
of
diagnosis including non-specific presenting features, unhelpful
laboratory
tests, negative results with tuberculin skin tests
and ZiehlNeelsen
staining and false-negative ultrasound
and CT
scans.
36
Others have found CT scan of the abdomen,
used commonly as a follow-on from
ultrasound, only marginally
more specific for abdominal TB than
ultrasound.
7,8
Our findings
also support previous work on the value of laparoscopy, the
most
specific diagnostic test for abdominal
TB,
9,10
with its
advantage of histological
confirmation.
11
Unfortunately this
investigation still tends to be used as a last
resort,
12,13
and
our series was no exception. In former times its function was
served by
laparotomy,
14,15
and a reluctance to intervene might
then have been more reasonable. With the
growing availability
of experienced operators, the morbidity of laparoscopy is
much
less of an issue. Our findings strengthen the
evidence
1618
that,
in patients with a relevant background and clinical history,
laparoscopy
is the investigation of choice.
 |
REFERENCES
|
|---|
- Teh LB, Ng HS, Ho MS, Ong YY. The varied manifestations of
abdominal tuberculosis. Ann Acad Med Singapore1987; 16:488
-94[Medline]
- Apaydin B, Paksoy M, Bilir M, Zengin K. Value of diagnostic
laparoscopy in tuberculosis peritonitis. Eur J Surg1999; 165:158
-63[CrossRef][Medline]
- Wells AD, Northover JM, Howard ER. Abdominal tuberculosis: still a
problem today. J R Soc Med1986; 79:149
-53[Abstract]
- Wilairatana P, Wilairatana S, Lekhyananda S, Charoenlarp P. Does
laparoscopy have a limited role in diagnosis of fibroadhesive tuberculous
peritonitis? Southeast Asian J Trop Med Publ Health1993; 24:762
-5
- al Quorain AA, Satti MB, al Gindan YM, al Ghassab GA, al Freihi HM.
Tuberculous peritonitis: the value of laparoscopy.
Hepato-Gastroenterology1991; 38:37
-40
- Badaoui E, Berney T, Kaiser L, Mentha G, Morel P. Surgical
presentation of abdominal tuberculosis: a protean disease.
Hepato-Gastroenterology2000; 47:751
-5[Medline]
- Jadvar H, Mindelzun RE, Olcott EW, Levitt DB. Still the great
mimicker: abdominal tuberculosis. Am J Roentgenol1997; 168:1455
-60[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Haddad FS, Ghossain A, Sawaya E, Nelson AR. Abdominal tuberculosis.
Dis Colon Rectum1987; 30:724
-35[Medline]
- Rodriguez de Lope C, San Miguel Joglar G, Pons Romero F.
Laparoscopic diagnosis of tuberculous ascites.
Endoscopy1982; 14:178
-9[Medline]
- Semenovski AV, Barinov VS, Kochorova MN. Laparoscopy in the complex
diagnosis of abdominal and genital tuberculosis. Problemy
Tuberkuleza 1999;3:36
-9
- Wolfe JH, Behn AR, Jackson BT. Tuberculous peritonitis and role of
diagnostic laparoscopy. Lancet1979; i:852
-3
- Inadomi JM, Kapur S, Kinkhabwala M, Cello JP. The laparoscopic
evaluation of ascites. Gastrointest Endosc Clin N Am2001; 11:79
-91[Medline]
- Bhargava DK, Shriniwas, Chopra P, Nijhawan S, Dasarathy S.
Peritoneal tuberculosis: laparoscopic patterns and its diagnostic accuracy.
Am J Gastroenterol1992; 87:109
-12[Medline]
- Lambrianides AL, Ackroyd N, Shorey BA. Abdominal tuberculosis.
Br J Surg1980; 67:887
-9[Medline]
- Tacyilcliz I, Akgun Y, Boylu S. Abdominal tuberculosis: diagnosis
and surgical therapy in 139 cases. Br J Surg1997; 84:92[CrossRef][Medline]
- Tison C, de Kerviler B, Kahn X, Joubert M, Le Borgne J.
Video-laparoscopic diagnosis and follow-up of a peritoneal tuberculosis.
Ann Chirurg2000; 125:776
-8[CrossRef]
- McLaughlin S, Jones T, Pitcher M, Evans P. Laparoscopic diagnosis
of abdominal tuberculosis. Aust NZ J Surg1998; 68:599
-601[Medline]
- Kasia JM, Verspyck E, Le Boudec G, Struder C. Peritoneal
tuberculosis: value of laparoscopy. J Gynécol Obstét
Biol Reprod 1997;26:367
-73[Medline]

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. Ramesh, G.S. Banait, and L.P. Ormerod
Abdominal tuberculosis in a district general hospital: a retrospective review of 86 cases
QJM,
March 1, 2008;
101(3):
189 - 195.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. Petrou, V. Vassiliou, S Rai, and W M Thomas
Diagnosis of abdominal tuberculosis * Authors' reply
J R Soc Med,
March 1, 2004;
97(3):
155 - 155.
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
D Singh-Ranger
Diagnosis of abdominal tuberculosis
J R Soc Med,
March 1, 2004;
97(3):
154 - 155.
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
P A Whitehouse
Diagnosis of abdominal tuberculosis
J R Soc Med,
March 1, 2004;
97(3):
155 - 155.
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|