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HANSEN’S DISEASE. Epidemiology. 1.25 cases per 10,000 persons India accounts for 80% of cases Brazil, Indonesia, Myanmar, Madagascar and Nepal endemic in the coastal southeastern US and in Hawaii related to exposure to armadillos. The Infectious Agent. Mycobacterium leprae
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Epidemiology • 1.25 cases per 10,000 persons • India accounts for 80% of cases • Brazil, Indonesia, Myanmar, Madagascar and Nepal • endemic in the coastal southeastern US and in Hawaii • related to exposure to armadillos
The Infectious Agent • Mycobacterium leprae • a weak acid-fast organism • It grows best at temperatures (30°) below the core body temperature of humans • localization of leprosy lesions to cooler areas of the body and the sparing of the midline and scalp • favors intracellular locations • long generation time of 12-14 days
Diagnosis • must be considered in any patient with neurologic and cutaneous lesions • Smears • cooler areas of the skin, such as the earlobes, elbows and knees, and stained with acid-fast stains • Skin biopsies from skin or nerve lesions using Fite-Faraco stain • Seropositivity
Classification • WHO classification • Paucibacillary – patients with few organisms in their tissue • Multibacillary - patients with large number of organisms in their tissue
Classification • Ridley and Jopling classification • based on clinical, bacteriologic, immunologic and histopathologic features • Tuberculoid leprosy • Borderline tuberculoid leprosy • Borderline leprosy • Borderline lepromatous leprosy • Lepromatous leprosy • Histoid leprosy
Tuberculoid leprosy • Paucibacillary • solitary or few in numbers (usually <5) and asymmetrical in distribution • erythematous or hypopigmented plaque with elevated border that slopes down to a flattened atrophic center (a saucer right side up) • lesions are anesthetic or hypersthetic and anhydrotic • face, limb and trunks.
Borderline tuberculoid leprosy • Multibacillary • Smaller and more numerous than tuberculoid leprosy • Satellite lesion around large macules or plaques • Bacilli are more abundant and grenz zone is present
Borderline leprosy • Multibacillary • Numerous but countable • Red, irregularly shaped plaques • Small satellite lesions may surround larger plaques • Lesions are generalized but assymetrical. • The edges are not so well define
Borderline lepromatous leprosy • Multibacillary • lesions are symmetrical and numerous (too many to count) • stocking-glove pattern of nerve involvement
Lepromatous leprosy • Multibacillary • Pale lepromatous macules or infiltrations • Numerous bacilli • Lesions are diffusely and symmetrically
Adjunctive therapy • Patient should be offered with occupational therapy, this include training on how to avoid injury to insensitive skin of the hands and feet and special shoes may be required.
Prevention • BCG (alone) • provide about 34% protection against infection • BCG with heat killed M. leprae • increases the protection to 64%. • ICRC vaccination was 65% effective. • Chemoprophylaxis with once yearly for hyperendemic regions • multidrug therapy with single-dose rifampin, minocycline and clofazamine
Leprosy type Features Tuberculoid * Can be either one large red patch with well-defined raised borders or a large hypopigmented asymmetrical spot * Lesions become dry and hairless * Loss of sensation may occur at site of some lesions * Tender, thickened nerves with subsequent loss of function are common * Spontaneous resolution may occur in a few years or it may progress to borderline or rarely lepromatous types Borderline tuberculoid * Similar to tuberculoid type except that lesions are smaller and more numerous * Disease may stay in this stage or convert back to tuberculoid form, or progress Borderline borderline * Numerous, red, irregularly shaped plaques * Sensory loss is moderate * Disease may stay in this stage, improve or worsen Borderline lepromatous * Numerous lesions of all kinds, plaques, macules, papules and nodules. Lesions looking like inverted saucers are common * Hair growth and sensation are usually not impaired over the lesions Lepromatous * Early nerve involvement may go unnoticed * Numerous lesions of all kinds, plaques, macules, papules and nodules * Early symptoms include nasal stuffiness, discharge and bleeding, and swelling of the legs and ankles * Left untreated, the following problems may occur: o Skin thickens over forehead (leonine facies), eyebrows and eyelashes are lost, nose becomes misshapen or collapses, ear lobes thicken, upper incisor teeth fall out o Eye involvement causing photophobia (light sensitivity), glaucoma and blindness o Skin on legs thickens and forms ulcers when nodules break down o Testicles shrivel causing sterility and enlarged breasts (males) o Internal organ infection causing enlarged liver and lymph nodes o Voice becomes hoarse due to involvement of the larynx o Slow scarring of peripheral nerves resulting in nerve thickening and sensory loss. Fingers and toes become deformed due to painless repeated trauma.