Abstract
Objectives: To present a case of thyroid tuberculosis and to discuss its clinical presentation, differential diagnoses and management.
 Methods:
 Design: Case Report
 Setting: Tertiary Government Hospital
 Patient: One
 Results: A 55-year-old farmer presented with an 8-month progressively enlarging anterior neck mass, and fine needle aspiration biopsy yielded grossly turbid straw-colored aspirate admixed with blood with microscopy showing scattered inflammatory cells and macrophages set against a colloid background. After total thyroidectomy, hispathology revealed parenchymal infiltration by multiple aggregates of plump spindled to epitheloid cells forming granulomas with interspersed multinucleated giant cells, central caseation necrosis and surrounding fibrosis with chronic inflammatory infiltrates. The nodal masses also showed prominent germinal centers with interspersed epitheloid cells and foamy macrophages. Final diagnosis was chronic granulomatous inflammation consistent with tuberculosis.
 Conclusion: Tuberculosis (TB) of the thyroid is a rare occurrence that can present as inflammation, infection or tumor formation of the thyroid gland. Diagnosis depends on identification of the tubercle from tissues and aspirates by acid fast staining and TB culture. Treatment consists of multiple drug therapy for tuberculosis but thyroidectomy may be an option if the thyroid gland is severely diseased.
 Keywords: tuberculosis, endocrine; thyroid disease
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