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CASE REPORT
Cat scratch disease and lymph node tuberculosis in a colon patient with cancer
  1. M Matias1,
  2. T Marques2,
  3. M A Ferreira3,
  4. L Ribeiro1
  1. 1Oncology Department, Hospital de Santa Maria, Centro Hospitalar Lisboa Norte, EPE, Lisboa, Portugal
  2. 2Infecciology Department, Hospital de Santa Maria, Centro Hospitalar Lisboa Norte, EPE, Lisboa, Portugal
  3. 3Pathology Department, Hospital Pulido Valente, Centro Hospitalar Lisboa Norte, EPE, Lisboa, Portugal
  1. Correspondence to Dr M Matias, margaridamatias.onc{at}gmail.com

Summary

A 71-year-old man operated for a sigmoid tumour remained in the surveillance after adjuvant chemotherapy. After 3 years, a left axillary lymph node was visible on CT scan. The biopsy revealed a necrotising and abscessed granulomatous lymphadenitis, suggestive of cat scratch disease. The patient confirmed having been scratched by a cat and the serology for Bartonella henselae was IgM+/IgG−. Direct and culture examinations for tuberculosis were negative. The patient was treated for cat scratch disease. One year later, the CT scan showed increased left axillary lymph nodes and a left pleural effusion. Direct and cultural examinations to exclude tuberculosis were again negative. Interferon-γ release assay testing for tuberculosis was undetermined and then positive. Lymph node and pleural tuberculosis were diagnosed and treated with a good radiological response. This article has provides evidence of the importance of continued search for the right diagnosis and that two diagnoses can happen in the same patient.

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