1 / 28

CASE PRESENTATION

This case presentation describes a 37-year-old patient with chronic knee nodules and joint stiffness. After multiple tests and biopsies, the diagnosis of mycetoma, a chronic subcutaneous infection, is made. This presentation discusses the clinical features, imaging findings, laboratory diagnosis, and management options for mycetoma.

cconnolly
Download Presentation

CASE PRESENTATION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CASE PRESENTATION What is the diagnosis?? 04/09/2015 Dr. J. Jagoda – Consultant Rheumatologist/DGH Gampaha Dr A. P. J. Cooray – Senior Registrar-Rheumatology/RRH Ragama

  2. Mr. P : 37 year old driver - 2003 • Mild discomfort and a lump in the anterior aspect of the knee • No other joint swelling • No fever • No rash • No recent history of an illness • No trauma

  3. Visits a Consultant Physician • Some blood tests were done • ?ESR/FBC – were said to be normal • Reassured and given painkillers • Lump regresses leaving behind an indurated area of skin and another two appear at different locations • Ignored by the patient • Not painful • No discharge • No systemic illness • Heal with scarring

  4. 2005 – He goes to the Surgeon • Lump reappears at a different location • Discharges grainy material • Previous scars also start discharging • FBC – Thrombocytosis, ESR 39mm • X-Ray: Soft tissue swelling with periosteal reaction • US scan : 4.5/2.0 cm cystic lesion superficial to the Tibia. Impression is that of a chronic abscess

  5. Superficial nodule is excised - 2005 • Histopathology report ; fibro connective tissue shows foci of eosonophillic crystalline material surrounded by neutrophills and pallisades of histiocytes. The stoma shows sheets of inflammatory cells Conclusion; The features are compatible with gout #Uric acid – 2.6mg/dl

  6. Severe knee pain with joint swelling - 2009 • Fluid aspirated out from KJ • Full report and culture sent • Mantoux test negative • Chest X ray – nothing to suggest TB

  7. Pain relief is given – feels well till 2013 ( Still has discharging nodules) • Tries ayurvedic treatment • Severe pain in KJ with swelling and fever • Goes to a Consultant Rheumatologist • WBC 11.6 * Neutrophill predominent, Platelets 691000 • ESR 130mm/CRP 96mg/dl • Aspirated out • MRI done • Arthroscopic synovial biopsy arranged

  8. MRI report

  9. Pigmented villonodular synovitis • A benign proliferative disorder of the synovium • Clinical pattern • Isolated tenosynovitis (Tenosynovial giant cell tumour) • Diffused form • Localized form

  10. MRI – characteristic appearance: Low signal intensity lesion in T1/T2 sequences

  11. Histopathology – synovial proliferation with foam cells & haemosiderin laden giant cells

  12. Antibiotics for 2 weeks and pain relief • ROM is now diminished • Multiple scar marks on his left knee • New subcutaneous nodules keep appearing • But no other joint involvement • He is feeling well i.e no fever, no night sweats, no loss of weight

  13. Back to our patient - 2014 • Multiple discharging nodules with stiffness of the knee • ESR – 52mm • Normal FBC • FNAC of nodule : suppurative inflammation • Synovial biopsy repeated • Trial of ATT considered

  14. What can it be? • Bone and joint TB • Gout • Rheumatoid arthritis • Tumour • Some other rare cause

  15. BIOPSY REPORT 2014

  16. Mycetoma • Chronic granulomatous subcutaneous infection • Aetiology • Actinomycetes – A.Pelletieri, A.Madurae, Nocardia sps • Fungi – P.boydii, M.Mycetomatosis

  17. Clinical phases • Painless subcutaneous swelling • Indurated area • Subcutaneous nodule • Spread to contiguous tissue • Sinus tracts – sulphur granules

  18. Diagnosis • Imaging • Radiography/CT • US scan • MRI • Laboratory diagnosis • Histopathology • Culture

  19. Features Cortical thickening Periosteal reaction Lytic lesions

  20. Features 1. Dot in circle sign

  21. Histopathology • FNAC or wedge biopsy • Synovial biopsy • Gram stain/Geimsa stain

  22. Identifying the causative organism Actinomycetoma Eumycetoma • Filamentous bacteria • Gram positive • 01 micrometer or less • Periphery is basophillic and the center is eosonophillic • Large grains • True fungai with hyphae and many chlamydophores • Gram negative • 2-4 micrometers • Large grain is 5mm or more

  23. Management Actinomycetoma Eumycetoma • Co-trimaxozole • Dapsone and Streptomycin • Rifampicin • Gentamycin • Penicillin • Itraconazole

  24. Do we finally have a diagnosis • ? Is it eumycetoma or actinomycetoma

  25. Thank you • Acknowledgements • Dr C.S.P Sosai – Consultant Histopathologist • Dr P. Rathnayake – Consultant Histopathologist • Dr M. Kothalawela – Consultant Microbiologist

More Related