CASE 1090 Published on 07.08.2001

Miliary tuberculosis of the brain

Section

Neuroradiology

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

S. Cakirer (1), O. Kilickesmez (2)

Patient

15 years, female

Categories
No Area of Interest ; Imaging Technique MR
Clinical History
A 15 year-old female patient had a history of pulmonary tuberculosis treated 3 years ago. She referred with a recent seizure attack. She had headache, malaise, chorea, and night fevers for the last few days as additional findings.
Imaging Findings
A 15 year-old female patient had a history of pulmonary tuberculosis treated 3 years ago. She referred with a recent seizure attack. She had headache, malaise, chorea, and night fevers for the last few days as additional findings. MRI study of the cranium was performed on a 1.5 T MR scanner, with SE T1, FSE T2, FLAIR, and post-gadolinium SE T1 weighted sequences on three planes. Lumbar puncture was performed, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination revealed low glucose levels with a few lymphocytic cells.
Discussion
Central nervous system (CNS) involvement occurs in 2-5 % of all patients with tuberculosis (TB). CNS TB may be observed in several forms: a) intracranial or spinal tuberculous granulomas (tuberculomas), b) tuberculous abscess formation which is relatively rare, and more common in HIV-positive patients, c) meningitis, and d) osteomyelitis of the skull or spine, often associated with epidural abscess. Clinical findings vary with the form of the disease. The causative organism is mycobacterium tuberculosis in 95 % of the cases. The bacilli disseminate from a pulmonary source hematogenously to the cerebrum. They often lodge at the gray-white matter junction, where they form tuberculous granulomas. Histopathologically tuberculomas develop in the following four stages: nonspecific focal cerebritis, granuloma, central caseation, and involution. TB abscess is much larger than tuberculoma, and it is formed by semiliquid pus which contains large numbers of organisms. TB abscess may be multiloculated, and it has a greater degree of surrounding edema. TB meningitis typically causes a thick basilar exudate that is associated with meningeal enhancement. TB meningitis may cause communicating or non-communicating hydrocephalus, infarctions secondary to tuberculous periarteritis in the territories of perforator vessels, and thrombosis. Differential diagnosis of CNS TB includes multiple brain metastases (which are associated with more edema and usually seen in adult patients); sarcoidosis (which are associated with rare parenchymal nodules and have common multiple dural and/or leptomeningeal nodules); and other infectious diseases (which are usually more heterogeneous lesions and associated with more edema).
Differential Diagnosis List
Miliary tuberculosis of the brain
Final Diagnosis
Miliary tuberculosis of the brain
Case information
URL: https://www.eurorad.org/case/1090
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.1090
ISSN: 1563-4086