Abstract
The incidence of tuberculosis (TB) infection in multiple organs outside the lungs is of particular concern. We present the case of a 48-year-old woman with a history of pulmonary TB who had a gradual loss of consciousness in one day, worsening shortness of breath, and a cough with green phlegm two weeks before admission. She had been undergoing five days of TB treatment with the drug-sensitive TB treatment regimen. The genital examination revealed a whitish mass in the paraurethral area, which impaired her urination. Blood gas analysis showed respiratory acidosis, and a chest X-ray suggested pulmonary TB and concurrent community-acquired pneumonia. She was diagnosed with extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB) in the central nervous systems and urogenital sites. To treat her lifethreatening EPTB, she received crystalloid infusions, oxygen supplementation, ampicillin-sulbactam (converted to meropenem the next day), an oral fixed-dose combination antituberculosis therapy, pyridoxine, N-acetylcysteine, ursodeoxycholic acid, Curcuma, bisoprolol, proton pump inhibitor, and antiemetics. Additionally, she was inserted with a urethral catheter and a nasogastric tube to assist her urination and nutritional intake. Our facility was a subdistrict hospital and had a limited capacity for diagnosing and treating EPTB due to a lack of advanced intensive care units, blood and sputum cultures, and laboratory panels. After her two-day hospital admission to ICU for stabilisation, she was referred to a higher-level hospital with more advanced pulmonary treatment overseen by a multidisciplinary team. Our resource limitations highlight the importance of being
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