Tuberculosis of the nasopharynx: a rare entity revisited.

Laryngoscope

Department of Anatomical and Cellular Pathology, Division of Otorhinolaryngology, Prince of Wales Hospital, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Republic of China.

Published: April 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study reported on 17 cases of nasopharyngeal tuberculosis, which is rare and primarily examined demographic details and clinical presentations.
  • Women were more affected than men (13 vs. 4), with a mean age of 38 years, and the main symptom was cervical lymph node enlargement (53%).
  • Most cases showed nasopharyngeal irregularities or masses during endoscopic exams, highlighting the difficulty in distinguishing this condition from cancer, thus requiring histological analysis for accurate diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Tuberculosis of the nasopharynx is uncommon. A large series of 17 cases is reported, and the clinical and pathological features are discussed.

Study Design: A retrospective review.

Methods: Seventeen archived cases of biopsy-proven nasopharyngeal tuberculosis were reviewed for patient age and sex, presenting complaint and duration, systemic symptoms, cervical lymphadenopathy, and chest x-ray findings. These findings were compared with a compilation of 40 cases reported in the English literature.

Results: There was a female predominance (13 women and 4 men), with age range of 20 to 74 years (mean age, 38 y). The most common presentation was enlargement of the cervical lymph nodes (53%), followed by hearing loss (12%), tinnitus, otalgia, nasal obstruction, and postnasal drip (6% each). The duration of the presenting symptoms ranged from 1 week to 1 year (mean duration, 16 wk). Ten patients (59%) had cervical lymphadenopathy, two (12%) had systemic symptoms (fever, weight loss, night sweats), and one patient (6%) had miliary pulmonary tuberculosis. Direct endoscopic examination showed nasopharyngeal mucosal irregularity or mass in the majority of patients (12 patients [70%]). These features were similar to those reported in the literature.

Conclusions: Nasopharyngeal tuberculosis is uncommon, usually occurring without pulmonary or systemic involvement. Cervical lymphadenopathy occurs in more than half of the patients and is the most common presenting complaint; this, together with the nasopharyngeal findings of mass or mucosal irregularity, makes differentiation from carcinoma on clinical examination difficult, necessitating histological evaluation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00005537-200304000-00027DOI Listing

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