Tubercular Lymphadenitis in Paediatric Patient in E.N.T. Practice

Authors

  • M Lateef Chesti Professor and Head, Department of ENT, Head & Neck Surgery Government Medical College Srinagar
  • Irfan Iqbal Associate Professor, Department of ENT, Head & Neck Surgery Government Medical College Srinagar
  • Showkat A Showkat Registrar, Department of ENT, Head & Neck Surgery Government Medical College Srinagar
  • Sajad M Qazi Associate Professor, Department of ENT, Head & Neck Surgery Government Medical College Srinagar
  • Ayaz Rehman Associate Professor, Department of ENT, Head & Neck Surgery Government Medical College Srinagar
  • Zarka Amin Registrar, Department of ENT, Head & Neck Surgery Government Medical College Srinagar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/saarctb.v5i2.3074

Keywords:

Cervicofacial masses, lymphadenopathy FNAB, HPE, developmental malformations, cystic lesions

Abstract

Tuberculosis is one of the biggest health challenge, the world is facing. Cervical lymphadenitis is a common manifestation of mycobacterial infections encountered in otorhinolaryngologic practices. It may be the manifestation of a systemic tuberculous disease or a unique clinical entity localized to neck. It remains a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge because it minimizes other pathological processes and eyelids in consistent physical and lab findings. A high index of suspicion is needed for the diagnosis of mycobact cervical lymphadenitis and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a cervical mass especially in endemic areas.

Key words: Cervicofacial masses; lymphadenopathy FNAB; HPE; developmental malformations; cystic lesions.

DOI: 10.3126/saarctb.v5i2.3074

SAARC J. Tuber. Lung Dis. HIV/AIDS 2008 Vol.5(2) 31-35

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Abstract
666
PDF
809

Downloads

Published

2010-05-07

How to Cite

Chesti, M. L., Iqbal, I., Showkat, S. A., Qazi, S. M., Rehman, A., & Amin, Z. (2010). Tubercular Lymphadenitis in Paediatric Patient in E.N.T. Practice. SAARC Journal of Tuberculosis, Lung Diseases and HIV/AIDS, 5(2), 31–35. https://doi.org/10.3126/saarctb.v5i2.3074

Issue

Section

Articles