Abstract

to arcus aorta that destructed of sternum and reached out to subcutaneous tissue and centrilobular nodules and tree-inbud sign in upper lobe of right lung. He was hospitalized and diagnosed with pulmonary and mediastinal lymph node tuberculosis. Spontaneous drainage of abscess occured. As an acid-fast bacilli, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and culture for Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex were positive in abscess material, a diagnosis of pulmonary and mediastinal TB was made and oral anti-TB therapy was started. Subtype analysis of material was compatible with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Immune deficiency and HIV A 10.5-year-old otherwise healthy male patient, coming from Somalia, admitted to our centre because of a swelling lesion on his chest over the sternum. The abscess had slowly grown over a period of 2 months. He had not have cough, fever and weight loss. There was a 4 × 4 cm sized fluctuating abscess on the skin over sternum in physical examination (Fig. 1). Bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) scar was positive on his left shoulder. Infection markers were negative. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) had showed subcarinal 43 × 30 mm sized with central necrosis in the middle of lesion, multiple mediastinal and hilar lymphadenopathies, 60 × 40 mm sized abscess close

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