Tuberculoma of the conus medullaris
Felix Riunga, Karishma Sharma
Corresponding author: Karishma Sharma, Department of Medicine, the Aga Khan University Hospital, 3rd Avenue Parklands, Nairobi, Kenya
Received: 20 Jun 2020 - Accepted: 03 Jul 2020 - Published: 28 Jul 2020
Domain: Infectious disease,Internal medicine
Keywords: Tuberculoma, conus medullaris, HIV
©Felix Riunga et al. PAMJ Clinical Medicine (ISSN: 2707-2797). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Cite this article: Felix Riunga et al. Tuberculoma of the conus medullaris. PAMJ Clinical Medicine. 2020;3:139. [doi: 10.11604/pamj-cm.2020.3.139.24428]
Available online at: https://www.clinical-medicine.panafrican-med-journal.com//content/article/3/139/full
Tuberculoma of the conus medullaris
Felix Riunga1, Karishma Sharma1,&
&Corresponding author
A 52 year old female presented with a one month history of progressive back pain radiating to the right lower limb. She reported unintentional weight loss of seven kilograms over three months and drenching night sweats. There was no history of cough. Her physical examination was unremarkable. A HIV ELISA test was positive. Her CD4 count was 27 cells/mm3 and viral load was 1.8 million copies/ml. An MRI spine (A,B) to evaluate the back pain revealed a single spinal ring enhancing lesion at T12 with minimal perilesional edema. A chest CT scan was in keeping with miliary tuberculosis. Sputum TB GeneXpert was positive for mycobacterium tuberculosis. Anti TB therapy was initiated with subsequent resolution of back pain. Back pain in a patient with miliary TB may indicate vertebral involvement or rarely, as in this case, intramedullary tuberculomas. Prognosis is usually good.
Figure 1: (A) T2 weighted MRI section of the thoracic and lumbar spine depicting the tuberculoma at the level of T12; (B) coronal section of the Thoracic spine with a ring enhancing lesion at T12