TY - JOUR KW - Humans KW - Leprostatic Agents KW - leprosy KW - Leprosy, lepromatous KW - Leprosy, Tuberculoid KW - Mycobacterium leprae KW - Peripheral Nervous System Diseases KW - Skin AU - Flageul B AB -
Leprosy still affects 240,000 persons every year in the world. It is a particularly common cause of neuropathy and severe disabilities in developing countries. With increasing migration, new cases of leprosy are regularly diagnosed in developed countries, where it still remains rare and so underestimated. Cutaneo-nevritic leprosy is the most frequent form of leprosy. It may be diagnosed by the clinical features and the cutaneous histology and bacteriology. Neuritic leprosy without obvious skin lesions is reported in 5 to 15% of leprosy patients. It must be suspected in persons from areas of endemic disease presenting with nerve thickening and associated nerve deficit. Nerve biopsy is essential for diagnosis. However search for bacilli in cutaneous samples may be of great help and avoid nerve biopsy. Acute and severe neuritis occurs during reactional states, reversal reaction (Type 1) and erythema nodosum leprosum (Type 2). Multidrug therapy is advocated. The treatment of acute neuropathy needs a supplementary medical and sometimes surgical treatment.
BT - Revue neurologique C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23131313?dopt=Abstract DA - 2012 Dec DO - 10.1016/j.neurol.2012.09.005 IS - 12 J2 - Rev. Neurol. (Paris) LA - fre N2 -Leprosy still affects 240,000 persons every year in the world. It is a particularly common cause of neuropathy and severe disabilities in developing countries. With increasing migration, new cases of leprosy are regularly diagnosed in developed countries, where it still remains rare and so underestimated. Cutaneo-nevritic leprosy is the most frequent form of leprosy. It may be diagnosed by the clinical features and the cutaneous histology and bacteriology. Neuritic leprosy without obvious skin lesions is reported in 5 to 15% of leprosy patients. It must be suspected in persons from areas of endemic disease presenting with nerve thickening and associated nerve deficit. Nerve biopsy is essential for diagnosis. However search for bacilli in cutaneous samples may be of great help and avoid nerve biopsy. Acute and severe neuritis occurs during reactional states, reversal reaction (Type 1) and erythema nodosum leprosum (Type 2). Multidrug therapy is advocated. The treatment of acute neuropathy needs a supplementary medical and sometimes surgical treatment.
PY - 2012 SP - 960 EP - 6 T2 - Revue neurologique TI - [Diagnosis and treatment of leprous neuropathy in practice]. TT - Diagnostic et traitement de la neuropathie lépreuse en pratique VL - 168 SN - 0035-3787 ER -