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13-06-2024 | Neurotuberculosis | Mini Review

Miliary meningeal tuberculosis — an unusual imaging presentation for an early definitive diagnosis

Authors: Shyam Sunder B. Venkatakrishna, Eleana Vasileiadi, Youck Jen Siu Navarro, Karen L. Hanze Villavicencio, Monica Miranda-Schaeubinger, Sean Schoeman, Shambo Guha Roy, Hansel J Otero, Savvas Andronikou

Published in: Child's Nervous System | Issue 8/2024

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Abstract

Purpose

Tuberculous meningitis (TBM) causes significant morbidity and mortality in young children. Early treatment can be initiated with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging diagnosis. We present MR-detectable miliary meningeal TB in two patients.

Case 1

A 9-year-old girl developed fevers, cough, lethargy, and seizures. Brain MRI demonstrated multiple, small, T2-dark, rim-enhancing lesions, associated with cranial nerve and leptomeningeal enhancement. CSF showed pleocytosis, low glucose, and high protein. Chest CT showed mediastinal lymphadenopathy, multiple small interstitial lung nodules, and a splenic hypo enhancing lesion. Serial bronchoalveolar lavage studies were Xpert MTB/RIF and acid-fast negative. Endobronchial US-guided biopsy of a subcarinal lymph node was positive for Xpert MTB PCR. She was started on a 4-drug treatment for TBM and dexamethasone. Contact tracing revealed a remote positive contact with pulmonary tuberculosis.

Case 2

A 17-year-old female with Crohn’s disease on adalimumab developed refractory ear infections despite multiple courses of antibiotics. She underwent myringotomy, with negative aerobic ear fluid culture. Brain MRI, obtained due to persistent otorrhea, showed multiple, small, round, T2-dark lesions. CSF studies were normal. CT chest, abdomen, and pelvis to assess for disseminated disease showed left upper lobe tree-in-bud nodules, hypoattenuating splenic lesions and a left obturator internus abscess with adjacent osteomyelitis. She underwent CT-guided aspiration of the obturator muscle collection, bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage, biopsy of two preexisting chronic skin lesions, and ear fluid aspiration. QuantiFERON Gold was positive. Ear fluid was Xpert MTB/RIF assay and acid-fast stain positive. Cultures from the ear fluid, skin tissue, muscle tissue, and alveolar lavage showed growth of acid-fast bacilli. She was started on 4-drug therapy and prednisone.

Conclusion

Our cases highlight that TBM in many cases remains a diagnostic dilemma — both our patients presented in a prolonged atypical manner. The term miliary TB not only refers to a pattern of interstitial nodules on chest radiographs but also indicates the hematogenous spread of the disease and concurrent pulmonary and extrapulmonary involvement with high risk of TB meningitis. We promote the use of the term miliary meningeal TB — in both cases, the neuroimaging diagnosis of TB preceded both chest imaging and laboratory confirmation of the disease. Miliary meningeal nodules on MRI may have characteristic T2 low signal and may be more conspicuous in children and immunocompromised individuals where background basal meningeal enhancement is less prominent.
Literature
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go back to reference Parsons M (1979) Tuberculous meningitis: a handbook for clinicians. Oxford University Press, New York, Toronto Parsons M (1979) Tuberculous meningitis: a handbook for clinicians. Oxford University Press, New York, Toronto
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Metadata
Title
Miliary meningeal tuberculosis — an unusual imaging presentation for an early definitive diagnosis
Authors
Shyam Sunder B. Venkatakrishna
Eleana Vasileiadi
Youck Jen Siu Navarro
Karen L. Hanze Villavicencio
Monica Miranda-Schaeubinger
Sean Schoeman
Shambo Guha Roy
Hansel J Otero
Savvas Andronikou
Publication date
13-06-2024
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Child's Nervous System / Issue 8/2024
Print ISSN: 0256-7040
Electronic ISSN: 1433-0350
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-024-06480-y

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