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. 2020 May 22;8(9):1837–1838. doi: 10.1002/ccr3.2949

Sago‐like appearance of pleura in Tuberculosis

Ashesh Dhungana 1,, Prajowl Shrestha 1
PMCID: PMC7495845  PMID: 32983510

Abstract

Medical thoracoscopy is an excellent tool for evaluation of exudative pleural effusion, and sago‐like appearance of parietal pleura is highly specific for tuberculosis.

Keywords: medical thoracoscopy, pleural effusion, sago‐like nodules, tuberculosis


Medical thoracoscopy is an excellent tool for evaluation of exudative pleural effusion, and sago‐like appearance of parietal pleura is highly specific for tuberculosis.

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1. INTRODUCTION

A 24‐year‐old lady presented with history of cough, fever, and weight loss for four weeks. Chest radiograph revealed presence of left pleural effusion. Pleural fluid was exudative (protein 3.8 gm %) and lymphocytic (90%) and had low ADA (14 U/L). Cytology revealed no malignant cells. Contrast‐enhanced computed tomography of the thorax showed left‐sided moderate effusion with collapse of left lower lobe. Medical thoracoscopy revealed diffuse thickening of parietal pleura with multiple nodules imparting "sago"‐like appearance (Figure 1). Few nodules had crumbly cheese‐like appearance.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Sago‐like appearance of parietal pleura

2. QUESTION

What is the diagnosis?

3. ANSWER

Tuberculosis.

4. DISCUSSION

“Sago”‐like nodules are the most common visual appearance, and its presence has high specificity and positive predictive value to make a diagnosis of tubercular pleural effusion. 1 In the index case, thoracoscopic biopsy revealed multiple aggregates of epitheloid cell granulomas with multinucleated giant cells, caseous necrosis (Figure 2A), and multiple acid fast bacilli on Zeihl Neelsen stain (Figure 2B) confirming the diagnosis of tuberculosis. Medical thoracoscopy is an excellent diagnostic modality for exudative pleural effusion, and its yield in tuberculosis is very high. 2

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Epitheloid cell granuloma with caseous necrosis (A) and acid fast bacilli (B) in pleural biopsy

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

None of the authors have any conflict of interest.

AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS

AD: involved in concept and design, data acquisition, drafting of manuscript, and critical revision. PS: involved in data acquisition, drafting of manuscript, and critical revision.

Dhungana A, Shrestha P. Sago‐like appearance of pleura in Tuberculosis. Clin Case Rep. 2020;8:1837–1838. 10.1002/ccr3.2949

REFERENCES

  • 1. Thomas M, Ibrahim WH, Raza T, et al. Diagnostic utility of sago‐like nodules on gross thoracoscopic appearance in tuberculous pleural effusion and their correlation with final histo‐microbiologic findings. J Tuberc Res. 2018;6:270‐280. [Google Scholar]
  • 2. Thomas M, Ibrahim WH, Raza T, et al. Abdul‐sattar. Medical thoracoscopy for exudative pleural effusion: an eight‐year experience from a country with a young population. BMC Pulm Med. 2017;17:151. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

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