Leprosy Flashcards

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1
Q

Cardinal signs of leprosy?

A

1 of 3 required
1. Skin patch with loss of sensation
2. enlarged peripheral nerve with loss of sensation
3. positive slit-skin smear

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2
Q

Describe the skin patch with loss of sensation?

A
  1. Hypopigmented
  2. Erythematous
  3. Streaming and satellite lesions
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3
Q

How to test loss of sensation?

A
  1. Light touch
  2. Pain (pin prick)
  3. Temperature discrimination
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4
Q

Describe the enlarged peripheral nerve?

A

Routinely palpate:
1. Great auricular n.
2. Ulnar n.
3. Radial cutaneous n.
4. Median n.
5. Lateral popliteal n.
6. Posterior tibial n.

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5
Q

Paralysis of the intrinsic foot muscles will?

A
  1. influence the architecture of the longitudinal and transverse arches which aid in the distribution of mechanical stress during walking
  2. while clawing of e.g the hallux shifts the fat pad to distal and exposes the MTP-I joint area to undue stress during push-off
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6
Q

Consequences of paralysis of the intrinsic foot muscles?

A
  1. unstable gait
  2. flattening of the arches
  3. arthrotic changes
  4. arthritis
  5. impairment
  6. ulceration
  7. deformity
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7
Q

Describe the slit skin smear?

A

The slit and scrape method
Incision, turn the blade 90 degrees
Active edge of lesion
LL: sites with high probability of demonstrating AFB’s

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8
Q

Where to get the slit and acrape sample?

A
  1. Earlobe
  2. Chin
  3. Extensor forearm
  4. Dorsal fingers
  5. Buttocks
  6. Knees
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9
Q

Technique of smear taking?

A

Smear, dry, fix, stain (Ziehl-Neelsen)

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10
Q

What is indeterminate leprosy?

A

Indeterminate lesion occurring in endemic areas and in children with
contact with active leprosy.
Carefully describe and record the suspect leprosy lesion and see the
patient back in 3 months

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11
Q

What is lepromatous leprosy?

A
  • No loss of sensation
  • Skin smear positive
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12
Q

Multi drug treatment for leprosy?

A
  1. Rifampicin: 600 mg once a month
  2. Clofazimine: 300 mg once a month, and 50 mg daily
  3. Dapsone: 100 mg daily
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13
Q

Durtion of treatment for leprosy?

A

Pauci-bacillary (PB) leprosy : 6 months
Multi-bacillary (MB) leprosy : 12 months

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14
Q

Prevention?

A

For adults and children (aged above 2 years) who are in regular contact with leprosy patients, the guidelines recommend the use of single-dose rifampicin

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15
Q

Leprosy reactions?

A
  1. type I
  2. type II
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16
Q

Type I leprosy reaction?

A

Type I= reversal reactie (RR)
– Type IV Coombs & Gell
– Delayed type hypersensitivity
– Chronic course

17
Q

Type II leprosy reaction?

A

Type II = Erythema nodosum leprosum (ENL)
– Type III Coombs & Gell
– Immune complexes
(cutaneous and systemic
vasculitis)
– Intermittent of continuous

18
Q

Type I leprosy reaction treatment?

A

prednisolone
- alternative = ciclosporin

19
Q

Type II leprosy reaction?

A
  1. Fever, myalgia, malaise
  2. Arthralgia
  3. Iridocyclitis
  4. Hepato-splenomegaly
  5. Orchitis
  6. Lymphadenitis
  7. Glomerulonephritis
  8. Skin nodules
20
Q

Leprosy stigmata?

A
  1. lagophtalmos
  2. claw hands
  3. dropfeet
  4. absorption of fingers and toes
  5. ulceration
  6. blindness