No pathology was detected in pericardial fluid cytology and pyogenic cultures were negative. Results of pericardial fluid study were as follows: lactate dehydrogenase (LDH): 1277 U/L, total protein: 5.6 g/dL, glucose 8 mg/dL, adenosine deaminase (ADA): 46 U/L and leukocyte count: 4600/mm3 (36% lymphocytes, 43% 15 eosinophils). Tuberculosispolymerase chain reaction (PCR) was positive in the pericardial fluid. Tuberculin skin test result was 20 mm. Thoracentesis was performed. In the pleural fluid, LDH was 263 U/L, total protein was 5.7 g/dL, glucose was 43 mg/dL, and total leukocyte count was 520 mm3 (80% lymphocytes).
With high ADA, low glucose levels, lymphocyte dominance and TB-PCR positivity in the pericardial fluid, accompanied by positive purified protein derivative test; the patient was diagnosed with TB pericarditis. We started anti-TB treatment with four drugs and corticosteroids.
Computed tomography scan of the chest also showed an abscess-like lesion (77x38 mm) through the whole right atrium and ventricle pericardium and total atelectasis in the right lung and massive pleural effusion (Figure 1b, c). Repeated ECHO revealed fibrin-coated mass adjacent to the right ventricle.
Partial pericardiectomy and abscess drainage from the right ventricle were performed with median sternotomy. In the operation, the whole heart surface was covered by diffuse white nodular appearing lesions; these lesions were excised (Figure 2). Tuberculosis -PCR and Ziehl-Neelsen staining were negative; TB culture was sterile in the abscess drainage material. Histopathologic examination of the pericardial biopsy revealed necrotic granulomatous reaction, Echinococcus granularis scolex and lamellar structure suggesting cuticular membrane (Figure 3a-c). Hydatid cyst hemagglutination test titration result was 1/4096. The patient started on albendazole. Abdominal ultrasonography and contrast enhanced cranial magnetic resonance imaging scanning for hydatid cyst were normal. With necrotic granulomatous reaction in the patient's pathology, the diagnosis of TB was confirmed histologically. Isoniazid, pyrazinamide, ethambutol, and rifampicin treatment was continued for nine months. Clinical and laboratory findings of the patient were completely normal at the ninth month of treatment.
When the literature in English language was searched, cardiac hydatid cysts were reported in 18 children under the age of 16 (11 of them from Turkey).[5] The most common symptoms were dyspnea, cough, weight loss and fever. In two of these children, the hydatid cyst was located pericardially; only one of the patients was admitted with cardiac tamponade.
Tuberculosis is an important cause of pericardial effusion and constrictive pericarditis worldwide. Tamponade is a frequent complication of TB constrictive pericarditis, but patients do well with appropriate therapy;[6] whereas abscess formation is a rare complication. Gulati and Sharma[7] demonstrated 15 abscesses in 13 patients out of a group of 120 patients with constrictive pericarditis. Tuberculosis was found to be the cause in all cases. Of the abscesses, 91% were apparent on computed tomography.[8] The most common localization was the right atrioventricular pericardium (77%), calcifications were seen in 27% and some of the abscesses contained septations.[6]
Tuberculosis and parasitic disease co-infection has been reported in the literature up to now in 22 case reports, seven of which were co-infection of TB-hydatid cyst. However, pulmonary TB and pulmonary and/or hepatic hydatid cysts were shown in most of these cases. To our knowledge, cardiac hydatid cyst co-infection with pulmonary TB was defined only in one case.[1]
In this article, we reported a 15-year-old girl patient presented with cardiac tamponade accompanied by pleural and pericardial effusion who was finally diagnosed with pericardial tuberculosis and pericardial hydatid cyst. To our knowledge, such cardiac localization of the TB-hydatid cyst co-infection was defined here for the first time.
The possible reasons for tuberculosis-hydatid cyst co-infection have been investigated. Increased Th2 response in helminth infections suppresses Th1 response. Patients in whom the Th1 response has been suppressed are more susceptible to other pathogens such as viruses, bacteria and tuberculosis.[9] Individuals with latent tuberculosis may reactivate in chronic helminth infection, and first time tuberculosis exposure during chronic helminth infection may facilitate tuberculosis infection. In addition, infection with parasitic diseases can alter the protective immune response to Bacillus Calmette-Guerin vaccination against Mycobacterium tuberculosis.[10] In endemic regions of both tuberculosis and hydatid cyst like the eastern and southeastern regions of our country, it is more likely to encounter atypical localizations, clinical presentations and even co-infections as in our case.
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.
1) Xin-Xu L, Xiao-Nong Z. Co-infection of tuberculosis and
parasitic diseases in humans: a systematic review. Li and
Zhou Parasites & Vectors 2013;6:79-91.
2) Akkaş Y, Katrancıoğlu Ö, Şahin E. Coexistence of
pulmonary tuberculosis and hydatid cyst. Cumhuriyet Med J
2011;33:483-6.
3) Elif Demirci, Eren Altun, Muhammet Calık, Irmak Durur
Subaşı, Sare Şipal,Ozge Beyza Gundoğdu. Hydatid Cyst
Cases with Different Localization: Region of Erzurum.
Turkiye Parazitol Derg 2015;39:103-7.
4) Alam S, Umer US, Gul S, Ghaus S, Farooq B, Gul F.
Uncommon sites of a common. Disease-Hydatid cyst.
J Postgrad Med Inst 2014;28:270-6.
5) Fiengo L, Bucci F, Giannotti D, Patrizi G, Redler A,
Kucukaksu DS. Giant cardiac hydatid cyst in children: case
report and review of the literature. Clin Med Insights Case
Rep 2014;7:111-6.
6) Cherian G, Uthaman B, Salama A, Habashy AG, Khan
NA, Cherian JM. Tuberculous pericardial effusion:
features, tamponade, and computed tomography. Angiology
2004;55:431-40.
7) Gulati GS, Sharma S. Pericardial abscess occurring after
tuberculous pericarditis: image morphology on computed
tomography and magnetic resonance imaging. Clin Radiol
2004;59:514-9.
8) OLeary SM, Williams PL, Williams MP, Edwards AJ,
Roobottom CA, Morgan-Hughes GJ, et al. Imaging the
pericardium: appearances on ECG-gated 64-detector row
cardiac computed tomography. Br J Radiol 2010;83:194-205.