Revista Habanera de Ciencias Médicas (Apr 2019)

Hemorrhagic tonsillitis as a presentation of Kaposi's sarcoma

  • Tahamara Alcalá Villalón,
  • Dinorah de la Caridad Oliva Venereo,
  • Albadio Samir Pérez López

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2
pp. 241 – 253

Abstract

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Introduction: Lesions in the oral cavity can be the first clinical evidences of HIV infection. Hemorrhagic tonsillitis should be suspicious of a Kaposi's sarcoma, among other causes. Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) is considered a marker of AIDS in HIV infection, which mainly affects the skin, but often acts upon the mucosa of the oral cavity.Objective: To identify hemorrhagic tonsillitis as a form of presentation of Kaposi's sarcoma associated to HIV.Case presentation: A 22-year-old male patient comes to the doctor´s office complaining of odynophagia and dysphagia. Hypertrophic tonsils of hemorrhagic aspect are observed in the laryngoscopy. Systemic cause is suspected, mainly, an HIV infection. A clinical onset of AIDS as a result of KS with predominant lesions in the oral cavity including the tonsils is confirmed.Conclusions: The hemorrhagic characteristics of tonsillitis leads to a presumptive diagnostic of HIV infection with a Kaposi's sarcoma occurring predominantly in the oral cavity.Keywords: Hemorrhagic Tonsillitis, HIV, AIDS, Kaposi's sarcoma

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