An imported case of leprosy in a trainee from Indonesia to Japan

A 33-year-old Indonesian man who was visiting Japan as a trainee in agricultural sector presented to the outpatient department of dermatology with a 1-year history of progressive rash. The rash had originated on his trunk and had gradually spread to his chest, abdomen, back and arms (Figure 1). The patient was not on any medications. He also denied any history of an allergy. Polymorphic, confluent, partially raised, hypopigmented macules that had progressed slowly were observed. The lesions demonstrated associated scaling, alopecia, and anesthesia. Although a left greater auricular nerve enlargement was detected, the patient did not show muscle weakness in his extremities. Skin biopsy specimens were obtained and analyzed using polymerase chain reaction,Mycobacterium leprae DNA was detected in samples obtained from hypopigmented macules. Thus, the patient was diagnosed with leprosy of the borderline lepromatous type. He was treated with multidrug therapy (rifampicin, clofazimine and diaminodiphenyl sulfone), which is established as the mainstay for leprosy treatment by the World Health Organization (WHO).1 The patient was followed up in the outpatient clinic. One year later, his skin lesions were faded. Leprosy control has improved significantly due to national and subnational campaigns in most endemic countries. According to official WHO reports,2 the number of new cases reported globally in 2015 was 211  973 (2.9 new cases per 100 000 people). Although leprosy is almost ...
Source: QJM - Category: Internal Medicine Source Type: research