Aphonia in pregnancy: Pulmonary TB with laryngeal involvement


Article PDF :

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Article type :

Case Report

Author :

Amit Kumar Verma, Alpana Singh, Sugandha Dev

Volume :

6

Issue :

4

Abstract :

A primigravida 28 yr old female reported in gynaecology casualty at a period of gestation of 33 weeks and 4 days with complains of dry cough for 2 weeks , breathlessness for 1 month and aphonia for 4 months. On examination her vitals were stable , she had minimal crepitations on left side on chest auscultation. On per-abdominal examination the uterus was relaxed, of 32 weeks in size with cephalic presentation and fetal heart rate of 142 beats per minute . She had a chest x-ray suggestive of consolidation in left lower lobe. Medicine opinion was taken and she was treated for lower respiratory tract infection. Otorhinolaryngologist opinion was taken and on indirect laryngoscopy there was moth eaten appearance of vocal cords, arytenoids were bulky and congested, inter-arytenoid mamillation was present and congestion of aryepiglottic folds and posterior larynx was present. A provisional diagnosis of pulmonary T.B with laryngeal involvement was made. A diagnosis of Pulmonary T.B with laryngeal involvement was made and patient was started on prednisolone tablet 20 mg once daily along with ATT. Betamethasone cover was given and induction of labor was done at 35 weeks of gestation with cerviprime gel due to severe oligohydramnios. Then cesarean section was done in view of meconium stained liquor with fetal tachycardia. A male baby of 2.4 kg was delivered and baby was started on syrup isoniazid in prophylactic dose. On post-operative day 5 patient had severe breathlessness. Tracheostomy and intubation was advised but patient got relieved and maintained saturation on high flow oxygen. At post-operative day 8 patient regained her voice after 4 months, was able to communicate and was symptomatically better. She was discharged with baby with stable vitals on tablet prednisolone and ATT. Patient was asked to follow-up with the otorhinolaryngologist and medicine department.

Keyword :

  Laryngeal TB, Pregnancy, Aphonia.