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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although a rare entity, laryngeal tuberculosis must be a diagnostic consideration--along with laryngeal carcinoma--whenever patients present with prolonged hoarseness or painful dysphagia. This form of tuberculosis was once thought to be especially virulent and more infectious than other forms; however, severity was probably the result of the frequent association with advanced cavitary disease. Laryngeal tuberculosis usually responds well to multiple-drug antituberculous therapy.
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PMID:Laryngeal tuberculosis revisited. 151 70

Laryngeal tuberculosis is now an uncommon disease in the United Kingdom. A series of ten cases is reported. In contrast to the pre-chemotherapy era, when the disease was associated with advanced cavitated pulmonary tuberculosis and was highly infectious, it now presents in a manner similar to laryngeal carcinoma except that painful dysphagia is a prominent symptom. All such patients should have a chest X-ray carried out as part of their initial investigation. Sputum is almost always positive for tubercle bacilli on direct films. Direct laryngoscopy and biopsy are necessary if a carcinoma is suspected. The change of pattern of the disease may be due to the fact that the larynx now usually becomes involved by haematogenous spread rather than by direct spread along the airways. Laryngeal tuberculosis is now no more infectious than pulmonary tuberculosis, and responds well to antituberculous chemotherapy. Symptoms resolve completely within three weeks if corticosteroids are given in combination.
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PMID:The changing pattern of laryngeal tuberculosis. 722 21

Laryngeal tuberculosis, although the most common granulomatous disease of the larynx, is a rare form of extrapulmonary tuberculosis, never reported in immunosuppressed allograft recipients. We present two cases of laryngeal tuberculosis in renal transplant patients and a review of the literature. Two women, a 29-year-old and a 60-year-old, each more than 9 years after their cadaveric renal allograft, presented with a 2-week febrile illness with hoarseness and dysphagia, and both were found to have laryngeal tuberculosis by direct laryngoscopy. Although both radiographs were unremarkable, both patients had sputum positive for acid-fast bacilli that subsequently grew Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Clinical response promptly followed institution of isoniazid, rifampicin, and pyrazinamide in each case, although both required threefold increases in daily cyclosporin A dosage to maintain therapeutic levels.
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PMID:Laryngeal tuberculosis in renal allograft patients. 958 Jan 43

The case of a 29-year-old patient with active laryngeal tuberculosis predominantly involving the epiglottis, without pulmonary disease, is presented. The predominant symptoms are dysphagia, odynophagia, and hoarseness. Laryngeal carcinoma, which shares almost the same symptoms and signs, should be ruled out immediately. Laryngeal tuberculosis is discussed with a brief literature review.
Dysphagia 2010 Sep
PMID:Primary tuberculosis involving epiglottis: a rare case report. 1978 1

Laryngeal tuberculosis is a rare disease. It is almost always associated with pulmonary tuberculosis. It occurs generally in adults without BCG vaccination or in cases of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. On laryngoscopy and imaging, it often simulates laryngeal carcinoma, and confirmation is always histological. We report the case of a 36-year-old man who presented to our hospital with dysphonia and dysphagia. Laryngoscopy revealed a lesion of the left vocal cord and the ventricular strip. CT scan found focal, regular thickening of the left vocal cord, associated with irregular thickening of the posterior laryngeal wall. A biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of tuberculosis.
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PMID:Primary laryngeal tuberculosis mimicking laryngeal carcinoma: CT scan features. 2035 85