Cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, complicated by Mycobacterium abscessus infection

Teratomas of anterior mediastinum are rare. They are often slow growing, asymptomatic, and detected incidentally on chest imaging. Mycobacterium abscessus (M.abscessus) is an acid-fast bacillus that is classified as a pathogenic "rapid growing" non-tuberculous mycobacteria. It is an uncomm...

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Published in:Respirology Case Reports
Main Author: Esa N.Y.M.; Radzi A.A.; Bakar N.S.; Khalid M.S.M.; Ismail A.I.; Rani M.F.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2016
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85002213644&doi=10.1002%2frcr2.155&partnerID=40&md5=c0e0afca222988ae2855749c035d038a
id 2-s2.0-85002213644
spelling 2-s2.0-85002213644
Esa N.Y.M.; Radzi A.A.; Bakar N.S.; Khalid M.S.M.; Ismail A.I.; Rani M.F.A.
Cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, complicated by Mycobacterium abscessus infection
2016
Respirology Case Reports
4
3
10.1002/rcr2.155
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85002213644&doi=10.1002%2frcr2.155&partnerID=40&md5=c0e0afca222988ae2855749c035d038a
Teratomas of anterior mediastinum are rare. They are often slow growing, asymptomatic, and detected incidentally on chest imaging. Mycobacterium abscessus (M.abscessus) is an acid-fast bacillus that is classified as a pathogenic "rapid growing" non-tuberculous mycobacteria. It is an uncommon cause of human pathology, which may cause skin and soft tissue infection after skin injury following inoculation, minor trauma, and surgery. Here, we present an unusual case of benign cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, which was subsequently complicated by M. abscessus infection following thoracotomy. Cystic teratoma is rare, but it needs to be considered whenever clinical and investigative work-up fails to provide a convincing diagnosis. A combined clinical, radiological, surgical, and histopathological assessment is important to arrive at the correct diagnosis. Rapidly growing mycobacteria needs to be included in the differential diagnosis of patients with non-resolving infected post-thoracotomy wound and who do not respond to broad-spectrum antibiotics. © 2016 The Authors.
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
20513380
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Esa N.Y.M.; Radzi A.A.; Bakar N.S.; Khalid M.S.M.; Ismail A.I.; Rani M.F.A.
spellingShingle Esa N.Y.M.; Radzi A.A.; Bakar N.S.; Khalid M.S.M.; Ismail A.I.; Rani M.F.A.
Cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, complicated by Mycobacterium abscessus infection
author_facet Esa N.Y.M.; Radzi A.A.; Bakar N.S.; Khalid M.S.M.; Ismail A.I.; Rani M.F.A.
author_sort Esa N.Y.M.; Radzi A.A.; Bakar N.S.; Khalid M.S.M.; Ismail A.I.; Rani M.F.A.
title Cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, complicated by Mycobacterium abscessus infection
title_short Cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, complicated by Mycobacterium abscessus infection
title_full Cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, complicated by Mycobacterium abscessus infection
title_fullStr Cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, complicated by Mycobacterium abscessus infection
title_full_unstemmed Cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, complicated by Mycobacterium abscessus infection
title_sort Cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, complicated by Mycobacterium abscessus infection
publishDate 2016
container_title Respirology Case Reports
container_volume 4
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.1002/rcr2.155
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85002213644&doi=10.1002%2frcr2.155&partnerID=40&md5=c0e0afca222988ae2855749c035d038a
description Teratomas of anterior mediastinum are rare. They are often slow growing, asymptomatic, and detected incidentally on chest imaging. Mycobacterium abscessus (M.abscessus) is an acid-fast bacillus that is classified as a pathogenic "rapid growing" non-tuberculous mycobacteria. It is an uncommon cause of human pathology, which may cause skin and soft tissue infection after skin injury following inoculation, minor trauma, and surgery. Here, we present an unusual case of benign cystic teratoma mimicking recurrent pleural effusion, which was subsequently complicated by M. abscessus infection following thoracotomy. Cystic teratoma is rare, but it needs to be considered whenever clinical and investigative work-up fails to provide a convincing diagnosis. A combined clinical, radiological, surgical, and histopathological assessment is important to arrive at the correct diagnosis. Rapidly growing mycobacteria needs to be included in the differential diagnosis of patients with non-resolving infected post-thoracotomy wound and who do not respond to broad-spectrum antibiotics. © 2016 The Authors.
publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
issn 20513380
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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