Enlarged submandibular node

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Miracoli

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A 4-year-old child presents with an enlarged submandibular node that is 4 cm in diameter, non-tender, and not fluctuant. The node has been enlarged for about 4 weeks and there is no history of fever or contact with any person who was ill. A complete blood count (CBC) is normal, and a Mantoux test with 5 tuberculin units of purified protein derivative shows 6 mm of induration. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
a) cat-scratch fever
b) acute pyogenic lymphadenitis
c) acute lymphoblastic leukemia
d) tuberculous lymphadenitis
e) atypical mycobacteria lymphadenitis
 
I'd narrow the choices down to C and E because the others would cause painful lymphadenopathy. C is possible because ALL can cause painless enlarged nodes, but the CBC wouldn't be normal. That would leave only E as a choice. Sounds like scrofula?
 
I'd narrow the choices down to C and E because the others would cause painful lymphadenopathy. C is possible because ALL can cause painless enlarged nodes, but the CBC wouldn't be normal. That would leave only E as a choice. Sounds like scrofula?

And cat scratch is more commonly axillary nodes with low grade fever.
 
I'd go with C, but this is a dick question if the answer is A without giving us either bug or history.
 
AND it wouldn't have a positive tuberculin test, which I think was the real clue to the question.
The test is not positive. Even with exposure to a person with TB, in children less than 4, the cutoff is 10mm of induration. In a population with no risk factors for TB, the cutoff is 15mm of induration.
 
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