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      Immune thrombocytopenic purpura in a case of tubercular pleural effusion: A rare presentation

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          Abstract

          Sir, Patients with both pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis may demonstrate peripheral blood abnormalities and the findings may be minimal or profound.[1 2] When thrombocytopenia occurs in TB it does so most commonly via non-immunologic means, typically manifesting in the context of pancytopenia that develops secondary to granulomatous infiltration of the bone marrow.[3] However, immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) in association with tuberculosis is extraordinarily a rare event. A 23-year-old previously healthy, non-smoker male was admitted in our hospital with history of fever and productive cough for 1 month and purpuric spots all over the limbs for the last 2 weeks, purpuric spots on oral cavity [Figure 1], respiratory distress and hematuria for 1 day. There was no history of arthralgia and weight loss. He was not on any medication at the time of admission. Past history and family history were non-contributory. On physical examination, vitals were stable. He had non-tender, non-palpable purpuric spots all over the four limbs and wet purpura on mouth. He had mild pallor, no sternal tenderness. There was no hepatosplenomegaly or lymphadenopathy. Left-sided vesicular breath sound was grossly reduced in mammary and inframammary region with stony dull percussion note. Figure 1 Wet purpura on palatal mucosa Serial investigations are shown in Table 1. His prothrombin time was 13.7 sec with control 11.2 sec and INR was 1.2 and APTT was 25.6 sec (n-22.6-35 sec). Clinically he was diagnosed to be immune thrombocytopenic purpura and intravenous methylprednisolone was started. Emergency chest X-ray showed left-sided pleural effusion. Pleural fluid was aspirated for diagnostic purpose and it was reddish in color. Table 1 Complete hemogram on day 1, day 2, day 3, day 5, and day 7 Next day patient complained of blurring of vision and ophthalmoscopy revealed hemorrhagic spots in retina of both eyes. Reports of biochemical analysis of pleural fluid which came on day 3, showed glucose 10 mg/dl, protein 6.5 gm/dl (serum protein 7.3 gm/dl), LDH 1100U/L (serum LDH 317 U/L), and ADA 80.3 U/L. We have started ATD CAT I. Bone marrow aspiration was done on day 4 and it revealed a cellular marrow with normal maturation of myeloid and erythroid series. Megakaryocytes were increased in number [Figure 2]. No granuloma and abnormal non-hematopoietic cells were detected. Bone marrow culture for Mycobacterium tuberculosis was negative. Figure 2 Bone marrow aspiration smear showing mature megakaryocyte with normal morphology (x40), Leishman Stain The platelet count normalized on seventh day and remained normal during the course of treatment. Sputum smear was negative for AFB initially and at the end of 2nd, 4th and 6th month of chemotherapy. Pleural fluid was positive for AFB by BACTEC culture on day 14. Pleural effusion was subsided on second week. Patient was discharged on the 21st day. Thrombocytopenia did not recur during follow-up for 1 year after completion of chemotherapy. A causal association between TB and immune thrombocytopenia is extremely rare. ITP is an acquired disorder in which there is immune-mediated destruction of platelets and possibly inhibition of platelet release from megakaryocytes. The pathogenesis of immune thrombocytopenia in tuberculosis is thought to be generation of lymphocyte-borne antiplatelet antibodies as a result of clonal proliferation of B-lymphocyte due to host's immune response to the tuberculous pathogen.[3] It was supported by presence of antiplatelet antibodies in few reports.[4 5] However, according to The American Society for Hematology's (2011) guidelines for the diagnosis and management of ITP, absence of antiplatelet antibodies in no way invalidate the diagnosis of ITP. Moreover, they labelled antiplatelet antibodies as an ‘unnecessary’ test for the routine evaluation of ITP patients.[6] However, many mechanisms specific for the disease itself can produce thrombocytopenia. Bone marrow changes like myelofibrosis, granulomatosis, amyloidosis, hemophagocytosis and necrosis can cause thrombocytopenia along with decrease in other cell lines.[7] Bone marrow aspiration of our patient showed only increased number of megakaryocytes which not only support the diagnosis of ITP but also excludes other production defect and hemophagocytic syndrome. Thrombocytopenia in TB is usually a complication of therapy with antituberculous drugs like rifampicin, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide.[8 9] Our patient had not received any ATT prior to presentation to our institution. So ATT-induced thrombocytopenia was ruled out. Absence of spleenomegaly excludes consumptive thrombocytopenia as may occur in disseminated tuberculosis in the context of tubercular splenic abscess. Absence of renal insufficiency, hemolyticanemia and neurological signs made TTP as a cause of thrombocytopenia unlikely. DIC was excluded as P-time and APTT was normal. The above case could be confused with coincidental presentation of ITP and tuberculosis. But temporal association of TB with immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) purpura, recovery of platelet count after starting antituberculous drugs and steroids, and absence of recurrence of thrombocytopenia after stopping antituberculous drugs are further evidences to suggest that thrombocytopenia was not co-existent with TB but was causally related to it. The case we described was negative for acid-fast bacilli in sputum. Depending on facts like pleural fluid analysis which showed high ADA (80.3 U/L) and high lymphocyte to neutrophil ratio, age of the patient which is below 35 years and from an area of India with high prevalence of tuberculosis, we diagnose it as a case of tubercular pleural effusion. This view is supported by some studies which showed non-invasive diagnosis using a ADA cut-off level of 40 IU with lymphocyte/neutrophil ratio above 0.75 can be used to diagnose pleural tuberculosis in patients <35 years old from countries with a high prevalence of tuberculosis and a low level of mycobacterial resistance.[10 11] So we started antitubercular therapy, to which our patient readily responded both clinically and radiologically. This was further confirmed by positivity by BACTEC culture. Most of the such cases published in the literature, are associated with sputum-positive pulmonary tuberculosis and tubercular lymphadenitis, disseminated tuberculosis, military tuberculosis with and without tubercular meningitis and one case of knee joint tuberculosis.[12] Only one case report mentioned tubercular pleural effusion which in due course found to be disseminated tuberculosis on clinical and radiological evidence.[13] Immune thrombocytopenia associated with only tubercular pleural effusion has not been reported earlier. So in this respect our case was unique. So, it is important that the medical community should recognize and consider TB as a treatable secondary cause of immune thrombocytopenia, especially in areas of high endemicity of TB. Financial support and sponsorship Nil. Conflicts of interest There are no conflicts of interest.

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          Most cited references12

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          Diagnostic tools in tuberculous pleurisy: a direct comparative study.

          Thoracoscopy is the most accurate yet most expensive tool for establishing the diagnosis of tuberculous (TB) pleurisy. However, most high TB-incidence regions have limited financial resources, lack the infrastructure needed for routine thoracoscopy and require an alternative, cost-effective diagnostic approach for pleural effusions. Altogether, 51 patients with undiagnosed exudative pleural effusions were recruited for a prospective, direct comparison between bronchial wash, pleural fluid microbiology and biochemistry (adenosine deaminase (ADA) and cell count), closed needle biopsy, and medical thoracoscopy. The final diagnosis was TB in 42 patients (82%), malignancy in five (10%) and idiopathic in four patients (8%). Sensitivity of histology, culture and combined histology/culture was 66, 48 and 79%, respectively for closed needle biopsy and 100, 76 and 100%, respectively for thoracoscopy. Both were 100% specific. Pleural fluid ADA of > or = 50 U x L(-1) was 95% sensitive and 89% specific. Combined ADA, lymphocyte/neutrophil ratio > or = 0.75 plus closed needle biopsy reached 93% sensitivity and 100% specificity. A combination of pleural fluid adenosine deaminase, differential cell count and closed needle biopsy has a high diagnostic accuracy in undiagnosed exudative pleural effusions in areas with high incidences of tuberculosis and might substitute medical thoracoscopy at considerably lower expense in resource-poor countries.
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            Miliary tuberculosis: clinical manifestations, diagnosis and outcome in 38 adults.

            The aim of the study was to determine the clinical, radiographic and laboratory characteristics, diagnostic methods, and prognostic variables in patients with miliary tuberculosis (TB). The records of 38 patients (15 male, 23 female; mean age 41 years, range 16-76 years) with miliary TB from 1978 to 1998 were analyzed. Patients were evaluated also as to whether they presented with a fever of unknown origin (FUO). Criteria for the diagnosis of miliary TB were (i) miliary pattern on chest X-ray or (ii) biopsy or autopsy evidence of miliary organ involvement. Paraffin-embedded tissues with granulomata (n = 15) were re-evaluated for the presence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Predisposing conditions were present in 24% of the patients. The findings were fever, weakness, night sweats, anorexia/weight loss (100% for each), hepatomegaly (37%), splenomegaly (32%), choroidal tubercles (13%), neck stiffness (11%), altered mental status (8%), anaemia (76%), leukopenia (26%), thrombocytopenia (16%), lymphopenia (76%), pancytopenia (8%) and hypertransaminasemia (55%). Eighteen patients (47%) met the criteria for a FUO. Miliary infiltrates were found on chest X-rays of 32 of 38 cases (84%). In six cases without miliary infiltrates, the diagnosis was made by laparotomy in four cases, and autopsy in two cases. Tuberculin skin test was positive in 32% of cases. Acid-fast bacilli were demonstrated in 37% (16/43), and cultures for M. tuberculosis were positive in 90% (9/10) of tested specimens (predominantly sputum and bronchial lavage). Granulomas were found in 85% (11/13) of lung, 100% (15/15) of liver, and 56% (9/16) of bone marrow tissue specimens. Acid-fast bacilli staining was negative in all (0/21), while PCR was positive in 47% (7/15) of specimens with granulomata. Mortality was 18%. Stepwise logistic regression identified male sex (P = 0.005), non-typical miliary pattern (P = 0.015), altered mental status (P = 0.002) and failure to treat for TB (P = 0.00001) as independent predictors of mortality. Miliary infiltrates on chest X-ray or FUO should raise the possibility of miliary TB. Therapy should be administered urgently to prevent an otherwise fatal outcome.
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              Immune thrombocytopenia: a rare presenting manifestation of tuberculosis.

              We report the case of a 49 year-old male who presented with immune thrombocytopenia (ITP)-induced epistaxis and generalized purpura. During the same hospitalization the patient was also found to have clinical, microbiological, histological, and roentgenographic evidence of disseminated mycobacterial tuberculosis (TB). The hematological and infectious abnormalities, which did not respond to high-dose intravenous corticosteroids and immune globulin (IVIg), resolved after anti-tuberculous treatment. Herein we review the characteristics of this rarely documented association. Copyright 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Lung India
                Lung India
                LI
                Lung India : Official Organ of Indian Chest Society
                Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd (India )
                0970-2113
                0974-598X
                Jan-Feb 2016
                : 33
                : 1
                : 105-108
                Affiliations
                [1] Department of General Medicine, Nil Ratan Sircar Medical College, Kolkata, West Bengal, India E-mail: drsourenpal@ 123456gmail.com
                [1 ] Department of Haematology, Institute of Haematology and Transfusion Medicine, Kolkata, West Bengal, India
                Article
                LI-33-105
                10.4103/0970-2113.173083
                4748647
                26933324
                411bf317-45b1-4eed-8513-7abf73cba96a
                Copyright: © Lung India

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

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                Respiratory medicine

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