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IFN-γ-Driven macrophage responses in the immunity to <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> and <i>Mycobacterium leprae</i>. [PDF]
Imran M +3 more
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Lucio's Phenomenon in Hansen's Disease: A Case Report of a Condition Not to Be Forgotten. [PDF]
Arenas Sanchez KA +4 more
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Experimental Lepromatous Leprosy
Nature, 1967Injection of Mycobacterium leprae has produced leprosy in mice previously thymectomized and given 900 r. of whole body irradiation to depress their immunological capacity.
R J, Rees +3 more
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Isoniazid in lepromatous leprosy
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1954Abstract 1. (1) Isoniazid was given a 6-months trial in eight patients suffering from lepromatous leprosy, some of whom had responded very poorly to previous sulphone treatment. 2. (2) Some form of lepra reaction occurred in all cases, causing treatment to be temporarily interrupted in two instances and dosage to be limited in two others. 3.
W H, JOPLING, D S, RIDLEY
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Lepromatous leprosy reversal reaction
The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2005A 41-year-old Dominican-born man presented in 2001 with lesions on his nose and ears, and numbness in both legs; all had developed over 2 years. He also described nasal congestion for several months. On examination, there were painless nodular lesions on the dorsum of his nose and ear lobes.
Lisa M, Chirch, Victor E, Jimenez
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Relapses in lepromatous leprosy
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1956Abstract 1. (1) West African lepromatous patients whom modern treatment has rendered bacteriologically negative are liable to develop relapses in the form of fresh outcrops of macules even in spite of continued treatment. 2. (2) These relapses show clinical and histopathological characteristics of the dimorphous (indeterminate) form of ...
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Mononeuritis Multiplex in Lepromatous Leprosy
Archives of Neurology, 1968MONONEURITIS multiplex refers to involvement of several or many peripheral nerves at the same or different points in time by a disease process. It is usually asymmetric, particularly in early stages, and has been reported to occur in periarteritis nodosa, 1 diabetes mellitus, 2 and leprosy.
R N, Rosenberg, R E, Lovelace
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TONGUE INVOLVEMENT IN LEPROMATOUS LEPROSY
International Journal of Dermatology, 1993Abstract Background. Involvement of the oral cavity in lepromatous leprosy is well‐documented. The tongue may demonstrate multiple nodules, thickening, and scarring. Methods. Ten consecutive untreated patients with lepromatous leprosy with a bacteriologic index of 4+ or more were clinically and histopathologically studied for evidence of tongue ...
V K, Sharma +3 more
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