Coexistent Sarcoidosis and Tuberculosis: A Case Report

Respiration. 2017;93(4):296-300. doi: 10.1159/000457804. Epub 2017 Feb 9.

Abstract

Necrotizing granulomatous diseases of the lungs are usually dependent on a narrow range of differential diagnoses. Tuberculosis (TB) is responsible for the largest number of cases, while necrotizing sarcoidosis is generally considered a rare and easily distinguishable disease substantially based on histological features. However, this entity has become a viable diagnosis in the absence of mycobacteria isolation or when a remarkable clinical improvement cannot be achieved with the combination of anti-TB drugs at full dosage. The classic manifestations of TB and sarcoidosis have an overlapping range for which it is sometimes difficult to make a clinical diagnosis. Furthermore, the role of mycobacteria as a trigger antigen capable of evoking the clinical expression of sarcoidosis is a hypothesis supported by evidence from some cases. We report a case of bilateral tuberculous pleurisy in a 45-year-old male native of a North-African region with an atypical severe multisystem disease characterized by a fever resistant to anti-TB therapy and respondent to corticosteroid treatment. The choice to continue both steroid and anti-TB therapy proved to be correct for the late evidence of TB mycobacterial growth only on pleural specimens. The case described is suggestive of a coexistent systemic sarcoid manifestation and low-antigen TB, which is an underrecognized entity in the medical literature.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Diagnosis, Differential
  • Humans
  • Lung / diagnostic imaging*
  • Lung Diseases / complications*
  • Lung Diseases / diagnostic imaging
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Pleural Effusion / diagnostic imaging*
  • Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography
  • Radiography, Thoracic
  • Sarcoidosis / complications*
  • Sarcoidosis / diagnostic imaging
  • Tuberculosis, Pleural / complications*
  • Tuberculosis, Pleural / diagnostic imaging