Clinics in Shoulder and Elbow (Jun 2022)

Total elbow arthroplasty for active primary tuberculosis of the elbow: a curious case of misdiagnosis

  • Radhakrishnan Pattu,
  • Girinivasan Chellamuthu,
  • Kumar Sellappan,
  • Kamalanathan Chendrayan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5397/cise.2021.00304
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 2
pp. 158 – 162

Abstract

Read online

The incidence of musculoskeletal tuberculosis (TB) is on the rise due to the current Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) pandemic. Spine is the most common osseous site, followed by other joints. TB identified in the elbow accounts for 2%–5% of skeletal TB cases, which are secondary to pulmonary TB. Primary elbow TB is rare. We report a case of primary TB of the elbow which had a negative synovial biopsy. A 46-year-old right-hand dominant female patient with chronic pain and disability of the right elbow was diagnosed with chronic non-specific arthritis based on an arthroscopic synovial biopsy. The case was diagnosed retrospectively as active TB from bone cuts post total elbow arthroplasty. Anti-tuberculosis treatment (ATT) was given postoperatively for 12 months. The patient reported good functional outcomes at 3 years of follow-up. Such atypical presentations of osteoarticular TB are challenging to diagnose. Therefore, particularly in endemic areas, clinicians should be careful before excluding such a diagnosis even after a negative biopsy. Further research should investigate whether active TB of small joints such as the elbow can be treated with ATT, and early arthroplasty should be a focus of this research.

Keywords