Fine-needle aspiration, an efficient sampling technique for bacteriological diagnosis of nonulcerative Buruli ulcer
- PMID: 19386847
- PMCID: PMC2691074
- DOI: 10.1128/JCM.00197-09
Fine-needle aspiration, an efficient sampling technique for bacteriological diagnosis of nonulcerative Buruli ulcer
Abstract
Invasive punch or incisional skin biopsy specimens are currently employed for the bacteriological confirmation of the clinical diagnosis of Buruli ulcer (BU), a cutaneous infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans. The efficacy of fine-needle aspirates (FNA) using fine-gauge needles (23G by 25 mm) for the laboratory confirmation of BU was compared with that of skin tissue fragments obtained in parallel by excision or punch biopsy. In three BU treatment centers in Benin, both types of diagnostic material were obtained from 33 clinically suspected cases of BU and subjected to the same laboratory analyses: i.e., direct smear examination, IS2404 PCR, and in vitro culture. Twenty-three patients, demonstrating 17 ulcerative and 6 nonulcerative lesions, were positive by at least two tests and were therefore confirmed to have active BU. A total of 68 aspirates and 68 parallel tissue specimens were available from these confirmed patients. When comparing the sensitivities of the three confirmation tests between FNA and tissue specimens, the latter yielded more positive results, but only for PCR was this significant. When only nonulcerative BU lesions were considered, however, the sensitivities of the confirmation tests using FNA and tissue specimens were not significantly different. Our results show that the minimally invasive FNA technique offers enough sensitivity to be used for the diagnosis of BU in nonulcerative lesions.
References
-
- Aguiar, J., and C. Steunou. 1997. Les ulcères de Buruli en zone rurale au Bénin: prise en charge de 635 cas. Med. Trop. 5783-90. - PubMed
-
- Aljafari, A. S., E. A. G. Khalil, K. E. Elsiddig, I. A. El Hag, M. E. Ibrahim, M. E. M. O. Elsafi, A. M. Hussein, I. M. Elkhidir, G. S. Sulaiman, and A. M. Elhassan. 2004. Diagnosis of tuberculous lymphadenitis by FNAC, microbiological methods and PCR: a comparative study. Cytopathology 1544-48. - PubMed
-
- Al-Moamary, M. S., W. Black, E. Bessuille, R. K. Elwood, and S. Vedal. 1999. The significance of the persistent presence of acid-fast bacilli in sputum smears in pulmonary tuberculosis. Chest 116726-731. - PubMed
-
- American Thoracic Society. 1981. Diagnostic standards and classification of tuberculosis and other mycobacterial diseases (14th edition). Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. 123343-358. - PubMed
-
- Bretzel, G., V. Siegmund, J. Nietsche, K. H. Herbinger, W. Thompson, E. Klutse, K. Crofts, W. Massavon, S. Etuaful, R. Thompson, K. Asamoah-Opare, P. Racz, F. Vloten, C. van Berberich, T. Kruppa, E. Ampadu, B. Fleischer, and O. Adjei. 2007. A stepwise approach to the laboratory diagnosis of Buruli ulcer disease. Trop. Med. Int. Health 1289-96. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
