Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease caused by acid-fast bacilli Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB). The lung remains the most common site involved by it. Extrapulmonary sites of TB are lymph nodes, pleura, bone, joints, urogenital tract, and meninges. Isolated Cystic Duct Tubercular Lymphadenitis (CDL TB) without involving the gallbladder is an uncommon manifestation of TB that primarily affects the lymph nodes around the cystic duct. A multidisciplinary approach is essential for accurate diagnosis and successful management of such cases. The authors hereby present a case of a 28-year-old female, without any evidence of TB elsewhere and an incidental finding of CDL TB. “The patient was sent with a clinical diagnosis of Chronic Calculus Cholecystitis (CCC)”. This highlights the need for comprehensive clinical evaluation and diagnostic investigations to avoid misdiagnosis or delayed management. This underscores the significance of maintaining a high index of suspicion for extrapulmonary TB, particularly in regions where the disease remains endemic. Healthcare practitioners should be vigilant when encountering unusual clinical presentations or when dealing with atypical combinations of gallbladder pathologies, as illustrated by the concurrent occurrence of CDL TB with CC with evidence of Pyloric Metaplasia (PM) and cholesterolosis without cholelithiasis, as in the patient of the present case report.

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