Literature DB >> 12596381

[Multifocal forms of Buruli ulcer: clinical aspects and management difficulties in 11 cases].

D Ouattara1, J P Meningaud, F Saliba.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: A certain number of authors have in literature pointed out multifocal forms of Buruli ulcer but no study was ever dedicated to them. The purpose of this study is to be more specific about the clinical aspects and to show how difficult it is for those multifocal forms of Buruli ulcer to be operated on.
METHOD: The 11 patients who were accepted for the study were subjected to an interrogation, a thorough clinical examination, research of BAAR in ulcers and operative pieces with a direct examination after Ziehl-Neelsen colouring. Each of these patients underwent a surgical treatment under general anaesthesia or spinal anaesthesia depending on the seat of the lesions under cover of pre and post operative therapy by antibiotics.
RESULTS: Initial lesions preferentially were located at limbs level; new foci appeared within an average period of 3 months, ranging from 1 to 15 months in some cases. All body parts could be the seats of secondary foci. Depending on the patients, the number of foci varied from 3 to 7. Furthermore, amputation has been necessary for the complete healing of four patients. The average operation was 2.4 by patient ranged from 2 to 5. We observed the healing of all the patients within an average hospitalisation time of 6.3 months running sometimes from 4 to 13 months. In addition to amputations, 4 patients presented after-effects as articular stiffness, retractions of the hand's dorsal face and knee's retraction.
CONCLUSION: Those multifocal forms can, with good reason, be considered as malignant form of Buruli ulcer.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12596381

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull Soc Pathol Exot        ISSN: 0037-9085


  3 in total

1.  Severe multifocal form of buruli ulcer after streptomycin and rifampin treatment: comments on possible dissemination mechanisms.

Authors:  Ghislain Emmanuel Sopoh; Ange Dodji Dossou; Luc Valère Brun; Yves Thierry Barogui; Jean Gabin Houézo; Dissou Affolabi; Séverin Y Anagonou; Roch Christian Johnson; Luc Kestens; Françoise Portaels
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 2.345

2.  Impact of human immunodeficiency virus on the severity of buruli ulcer disease: results of a retrospective study in cameroon.

Authors:  Vanessa Christinet; Eric Comte; Laura Ciaffi; Peter Odermatt; Micaela Serafini; Annick Antierens; Ludovic Rossel; Alain-Bertrand Nomo; Patrick Nkemenang; Akoa Tsoungui; Cecile Delhumeau; Alexandra Calmy
Journal:  Open Forum Infect Dis       Date:  2014-05-21       Impact factor: 3.835

3.  Clinical Epidemiology of Buruli Ulcer from Benin (2005-2013): Effect of Time-Delay to Diagnosis on Clinical Forms and Severe Phenotypes.

Authors:  Carlos Capela; Ghislain E Sopoh; Jean G Houezo; René Fiodessihoué; Ange D Dossou; Patrício Costa; Alexandra G Fraga; João F Menino; Rita Silva-Gomes; Edgard M Ouendo; Fernando Rodrigues; Jorge Pedrosa
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2015-09-10
  3 in total

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