Paradoxical response to anti-tuberculosis treatment, defined as clinical or radiologic worsening of pre-existing lesions or the development of new lesions while ongoing treatment, poses diagnostic dilemma. Intestinal perforation as a paradoxical response is rare. We report a 10-year-old female who presented with recurrent abdominal pain, anorexia, and bloody diarrhea, and was diagnosed with disseminated tuberculosis. She had marked improvement after one month of anti-tuberculosis treatment but developed a recurrence of initial symptoms on the third month of therapy and was treated for cecal perforation. Histopathology of cecum revealed chronic granulomatous inflammation. The patient improved after the surgery and the resumption of anti-tuberculosis medications. Recognition of paradoxical reactions and differentiating it from drug resistance of other pathology is important as these necessitates different management strategies.
Human
;
Female
;
Child: 6-12 yrs old
;
intestinal perforation