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Isolated splenic mycobacterial disease: a cause of persistent fever in a hairy cell leukemia patient

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posted on 2024-11-14, 20:49 authored by Vassilios Papadopoulos, Charalambos Kartsios, Anatassia Spyrou, Kostas Loukidis, Spyridon MiyakisSpyridon Miyakis, Stavroula Pervana, Charalambos Makridis, Anna Kioumi, Ioannis Korantzis
We describe a 69-year-old male patient who was referred for the investigation of long-lasting fever, anemia and neutropenia. Hairy cell leukemia was diagnosed and treated successfully. However, fever persisted despite thorough investigation and use of broad-spectrum antibiotics. Four months after the initial diagnosis, the patient underwent explorative laparotomy and splenectomy. Spleen biopsy revealed multiple necrotizing mycobacterial granulomata while the patient's fever disappeared permanently. Isolated splenic mycobacterial disease is very rare. This case report emphasizes that investigation of chronic fever in hairy cell leukemia requires a high level of clinical suspicion. Early diagnostic procedures for evidence of a typical mycobacterial infection should be considered. When everything else fails, surgery can be helpful in selected cases.

History

Citation

Papadopoulos, V., Kartsios, C., Spyrou, A., Loukidis, K., Miyakis, S., Pervana, S., Makridis, C., Kioumi, A., Korantzis, I. (2010). Isolated splenic mycobacterial disease: a cause of persistent fever in a hairy cell leukemia patient. Case Reports in Gastroenterology, 4 (3), 330-334.

Journal title

Case Reports in Gastroenterology

Volume

4

Issue

3

Pagination

330-334

Language

English

RIS ID

71890

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