Abdominal tuberculosis: sonographic diagnosis and treatment response in HIV-positive adults in rural South Africa

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijid.2009.11.030Get rights and content
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Summary

Objective

To investigate the diagnostic value of abdominal ultrasound in HIV-positive inpatients in a rural African setting.

Methods

This was a prospective case series over 3 months of adult HIV-positive patients with symptoms suggestive of abdominal tuberculosis (TB). Diagnostic ultrasound was performed for all patients: sonographic criteria included abdominal lymph node enlargement (>1.5 cm) and focal splenic lesions; ascites was a supportive finding. Further diagnostic studies, e.g., aspiration or biopsy were not routinely performed. TB treatment was initiated on the basis of clinical and sonographic features. The patients were contacted after 4 months to evaluate the clinical outcome.

Results

One hundred and eighty adult HIV-positive patients were screened; 30 (16.7%) showed sonographic signs of abdominal TB. The median CD4 count was 78 cells/mm3. Presenting symptoms were weight loss (86.7%), abdominal pain (76.7%), and diarrhea (60%). Abdominal lymph node enlargement was the diagnostic finding in almost all cases (96.7%); hypoechoic lesions of the spleen were seen in 50% and ascites in 73.3%. Follow-up information was available for 25 patients: 24% had died and the remaining 76% reported symptomatic improvement and weight gain.

Conclusions

Characteristic sonographic features of abdominal TB are common in HIV-infected inpatients in a rural African setting. Ultrasound should be introduced into clinical algorithms for the diagnosis of extrapulmonary TB.

Keywords

Ultrasound
TB
HIV

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Presented in part at the 4th Southern African AIDS Conference, March 31–April 3, 2009, Durban, South Africa (abstract 278, poster presentation).