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Recent Articles
Siddiqui MR, Moreira AL, Negesse Y, Taye GA, Hanekom WA, Haslett
PA, Britton S, Kaplan G.
Local nerve damage in leprosy does not lead to an impaired
cellular immune response or decreased wound healing in the skin.
J Infect Dis 2002 Jul 15;186(2):260-5
PMID: 12134264
This study investigated whether peripheral nerve damage in patients
with leprosy
impairs local cellular immune responses, thereby reducing wound
healing and
leading to chronic skin ulceration. Anesthetic and contralateral
sensitive skin
sites in 42 patients with leprosy were compared for delayed-type
hypersensitivity responses to purified protein derivative (PPD)
of tuberculin.
Leukocyte recruitment, epidermal activation, keratinocyte proliferation,
and
rates of wound healing after skin biopsy were compared. No significant
differences in PPD-induced induration, epidermal activation and
thickening or
numbers of total T cells, CD8(+) T cells, CD1a(+) Langerhans cells,
and
proliferating Ki67(+) keratinocytes were observed between anesthetic
and
sensitive skin sites. Similarly, rates of wound healing over 5 days
after skin
biopsy did not differ significantly. Thus, local leprosy-associated
anesthesia
does not appear to contribute to local immune compromise or impaired
wound
healing. Rather, chronic cutaneous ulceration in leprosy most likely
results
from repeated trauma associated with loss of sensation.

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