Atypical gouty tophus masquerading as a foreign body granuloma

Subcutaneous nodular lesions in a patient with significantly elevated inflammatory markers always raise the possibility of infectious diagnoses such as atypical infection, pyogenic abscess, mycobacterial infection, and malignancy. Definitive diagnosis requires tissue biopsy and histopathologic exami...

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Published in:EGYPTIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Main Authors: Omar, Farhana; Hashimah, Abu Mansor Matardiah Nor; Suhaila, Ab Wahab; Mohaidin, Farhana Mohammad; Raymond, Azman Ali
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SPRINGERNATURE 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001284697000002
author Omar
Farhana; Hashimah
Abu Mansor Matardiah Nor; Suhaila
Ab Wahab; Mohaidin
Farhana Mohammad; Raymond
Azman Ali
spellingShingle Omar
Farhana; Hashimah
Abu Mansor Matardiah Nor; Suhaila
Ab Wahab; Mohaidin
Farhana Mohammad; Raymond
Azman Ali
Atypical gouty tophus masquerading as a foreign body granuloma
General & Internal Medicine
author_facet Omar
Farhana; Hashimah
Abu Mansor Matardiah Nor; Suhaila
Ab Wahab; Mohaidin
Farhana Mohammad; Raymond
Azman Ali
author_sort Omar
spelling Omar, Farhana; Hashimah, Abu Mansor Matardiah Nor; Suhaila, Ab Wahab; Mohaidin, Farhana Mohammad; Raymond, Azman Ali
Atypical gouty tophus masquerading as a foreign body granuloma
EGYPTIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
English
Article
Subcutaneous nodular lesions in a patient with significantly elevated inflammatory markers always raise the possibility of infectious diagnoses such as atypical infection, pyogenic abscess, mycobacterial infection, and malignancy. Definitive diagnosis requires tissue biopsy and histopathologic examination. The atypical presentation of a foreign body granuloma with concurrent intraoperative findings supports the diagnosis of gouty arthritis.We report a case of a 67-year-old man who presented with an inflammatory nodular lesion on the left elbow that was initially suspected to have an infectious cause. Histopathologic examination of the nodular tissue later revealed that the patient had a foreign body granuloma due to urate crystal deposition. The atypical appearance of the gouty arthritis, the low serum urate level, the negative crystal identification in the synovial fluid, and the markedly elevated inflammatory markers, which did not respond to the previous antibiotic and steroid therapy, raised the suspicion of atypical infection in this case.
SPRINGERNATURE
1110-7782
2090-9098
2024
36
1
10.1186/s43162-024-00347-z
General & Internal Medicine

WOS:001284697000002
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001284697000002
title Atypical gouty tophus masquerading as a foreign body granuloma
title_short Atypical gouty tophus masquerading as a foreign body granuloma
title_full Atypical gouty tophus masquerading as a foreign body granuloma
title_fullStr Atypical gouty tophus masquerading as a foreign body granuloma
title_full_unstemmed Atypical gouty tophus masquerading as a foreign body granuloma
title_sort Atypical gouty tophus masquerading as a foreign body granuloma
container_title EGYPTIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
language English
format Article
description Subcutaneous nodular lesions in a patient with significantly elevated inflammatory markers always raise the possibility of infectious diagnoses such as atypical infection, pyogenic abscess, mycobacterial infection, and malignancy. Definitive diagnosis requires tissue biopsy and histopathologic examination. The atypical presentation of a foreign body granuloma with concurrent intraoperative findings supports the diagnosis of gouty arthritis.We report a case of a 67-year-old man who presented with an inflammatory nodular lesion on the left elbow that was initially suspected to have an infectious cause. Histopathologic examination of the nodular tissue later revealed that the patient had a foreign body granuloma due to urate crystal deposition. The atypical appearance of the gouty arthritis, the low serum urate level, the negative crystal identification in the synovial fluid, and the markedly elevated inflammatory markers, which did not respond to the previous antibiotic and steroid therapy, raised the suspicion of atypical infection in this case.
publisher SPRINGERNATURE
issn 1110-7782
2090-9098
publishDate 2024
container_volume 36
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1186/s43162-024-00347-z
topic General & Internal Medicine
topic_facet General & Internal Medicine
accesstype
id WOS:001284697000002
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001284697000002
record_format wos
collection Web of Science (WoS)
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