Afterwards, the patient was admitted to our hospital for extensive surgery to remove the mass. Pus drainage from the needle insertion area was seen on an examination, but the remaining physical examination was normal. An anteroposterior chest radiograph showed no abnormalities with the lung parenchyma or bone structures. Sternal tuberculosis was suspected as the first priority in a differential diagnosis; therefore, local debridement of the infected tissue and punch biopsies from the sternum were performed under local anesthesia.
Amoxicilin-clavulonate was given for ten days because of the growth of methicillinsensitive Staphylococcus epidermidis, and he was discharged from the hospital on the postoperative third day. Furthermore, isoniazid, rifampin, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide were started when the histopathological examination suggested the presence of TB on the postoperative eighth day (Figure 2). Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which was not seen microscopically via acid-fast staining, was cultured from a biopsy specimen on the 15th day using the BACTECTM 460TB system (Becton Dickinson, Heidelberg, Germany), and on the 25th day using Lowenstein-Jensen medium. The antitubercular drug susceptibility test also revealed no resistance. By the end of two months of treatment, the masses were reduced in size, and there was no drainage. The fourdrug anti-tuberculous treatment was then switched to a two-drug regimen of isoniazid and rifampicin. In the follow-up period, the anti-tuberculous therapy was well tolerated, and no adverse reactions, such as elevated liver enzymes, were seen. Control contrastenhanced CT of the thorax was repeated at the end of the therapy, and it did not detect any remaining mass, and it showed centrally calcified and noncalcified nodules of less than 1 cm in diameter on the subcutaneous fat tissue near the left lateral distal part of the sternum (Figure 3). After nine months, the treatment with isoniazid and rifampin was discontinued.
Similar to our case, constitutional symptoms are uncommon in sternal TB, and pain and swelling over the sternum were the only symptoms our patient had that were in accordance with previous cases.[1,3-7] In addition, there are two different observations about gender predilection. Sapmaz et al.[3] reported that there is no gender predilection associated with this disease, whereas Günay et al.[6] a dvocated m ale predominance in tubercular sternal osteomyelitis. Our patient is representative of a typical case of sternal TB featuring a clinical picture of a middle-aged male living in a country where TB is endemic. Unlike the previous cases, our patient had no underlying risk factors and no immunosuppressive diseases. For example, he had no HIV infection or DM and had not undergone open heart surgery. Neither had he received a BCG vaccination or suffered from intravenous drug addiction.[1,7]
Radiological imaging is essential in the diagnosis of osteomyelitis, but it is not helpful by itself in the differential diagnosis of pyogenic and tuberculous forms of this disease.[3] Atasoy et al.[5] reported that thoracic CT is not superior to lateral radiographs of the sternum for diagnosing tubercular sternal osteomyelitis, but CT does provide the opportunity to evaluate the lung parenchyma, mediastinum, and soft tissue for tubercular involvement. According to the same study by Atasoy et al.,[5] magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a better option for differentiating between sternal osteomyelitis and peristernal soft tissue infection as well as for viewing earlier abnormalities in the bone marrow. In our case, no abnormalities were seen in the lung parencyhma on a normal anteroposterior chest radiograph. Our patient did not have a lateral X-ray of the sternum, but both the CT image of the soft tissue mass eroding the sternum and the clinical picture had given rise to the suspicion of sternal osteomyelitis.
A histopathological examination revealed the diagnosis of TB in our case based on the caseous granulomatous reaction composed of epitheloid cells and Langhans giant cells.[1,4-6] Furthermore, the cultures of both the Lowenstein-Jensen medium and BACTECTM 460TB system grew Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
There are two ways to treat tubercular sternal osteomyelitis. One option is anti-tuberculous chemotherapy, and the second option is for the patient to undergo the chemotherapy in combination with surgery. The surgery may be minor, or it can involve extensive debridement of the bone and/ or surrounding muscle resection. In that case, reconstructive surgery is also necessary.[1,3-7] The Turkish Ministry of Health recommended nine months of anti-tuberculous therapy for osteoarticular TB in the Guideline of Tuberculosis Diagnosis and Therapy published in 2011.[8]
Mycobacterium tuberculosis was found t o be resistant to isoniazide in one previous case in Turkey.[3] Our patient had sternal TB with sternal tuberculosis was treated with quadruple drug therapy for the first two months and then with only two drugs, with all of the drug therapy being completed after nine months. An antituberculous drug susceptibility test yielded no resistance, and the case was treated without any complications. Our patient was fortunate because of the early suspicion of tuberculous osteomyelitis preoperatively as a result of a consultation regarding disease. We only needed to perform minor local surgery to confirm the diagnosis of TB, and extensive major surgery necessitating reconstruction was not needed.
In conclusion, sternal TB should be kept in mind in the differential diagnosis of a mass involving the chest wall, particularly in endemic areas. This approach will prevent patients with sternal TB, which often mimicks a tumoral lesion, from undergoing unnecessary major surgery.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this
article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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