Ungual Tuberculosis: A Unique Clinical Case

Cutaneous manifestations of tuberculosis (TB) are rare, particularly from an exogenous source. Involvement of the nail apparatus is extremely rare and has only previously been reported as a secondary involvement. We report the case of a 76-year-old female patient referred to our department with onychodystrophy with purulent drainage of the first left finger, which had developed during the preceding year. She had no previous traumatic history and had received treatment with multiple cycles of oral antibiotics and antimycotics, with no clinical improvement. Physical examination showed paronychia and onychodystrophy of the entire nail plate. Biopsy evaluation revealed epithelioid granulomas with central foci of necrosis, and laboratory cultures were positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosiscomplex. Chest computed tomography excluded primary pulmonary TB. X-ray of the left hand revealed the presence of dactylitis on the distal phalanx. Based on these findings, the patient was treated with rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol for 2 months and with rifampicin and isoniazid for 7 months, resulting in complete resolution of the lesions. Cutaneous TB is a diagnostic challenge, particularly in rare cases such as involvement of the nail apparatus. It should be considered as a diagnostic hypothesis in cases of painless paronychia with refractory purulent drainage and associated onychodystrophy.

[1]  J. du Plessis,et al.  Cutaneous tuberculosis overview and current treatment regimens. , 2015, Tuberculosis.

[2]  A. Agarwal,et al.  Tuberculous Dactylitis Presenting as Paronychia with Pseudopterygium and Nail Dystrophy , 2013, Pediatric dermatology.

[3]  Amlan Gupta,et al.  Multifocal Childhood Cutaneous Tuberculosis: Report of Two Interesting Cases from Sikkim, India , 2013, Pediatric dermatology.

[4]  H. Ko,et al.  Delayed Diagnosis of Scrofuloderma Misdiagnosed as a Bacterial Abscess , 2012, Annals of dermatology.

[5]  A. Jain Tuberculosis of the skeletal system (bones, joints, spine and bursal sheaths) , 2010, Indian Journal of Orthopaedics.

[6]  S. Kanj,et al.  Primary Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex cutaneous infection: report of two cases and literature review. , 2008, International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases.

[7]  C. Mainetti,et al.  [Cutaneous manifestations of tuberculosis]. , 1990, Schweizerische Rundschau fur Medizin Praxis = Revue suisse de medecine Praxis.

[8]  T. O'donnell,et al.  An occupational hazard--tuberculous paronychia. Report of a case. , 1971, Archives of surgery.

[9]  J. Hartmann,et al.  Tuberculous dactylitis in childhood; a prognosis. , 1947, The Journal of pediatrics.

[10]  C. Sanders,et al.  Cutaneous Tuberculosis , 2017 .

[11]  N. Sánchez,et al.  Cutaneous Manifestations of Pulmonary Disease , 2012 .

[12]  D. Goette,et al.  Primary inoculation tuberculosis of the skin. Prosector's paronychia,. , 1978, Archives of dermatology.