| Literature DB >> 28095664 |
Iraj Mohammadpour1, Mohammad Hossein Motazedian2, Farhad Handjani3, Gholam Reza Hatam1.
Abstract
Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is a protozoan disease which is endemic in Iran. It is transmitted by the Phlebotomus sand fly. The eyelid is rarely involved possibly because the movement of the lids impedes the sand fly from biting the skin in this region. Here, we report 6 rare cases of eyelid CL. The patients were diagnosed by skin scraping, culture, and PCR from the lesions. Skin scraping examination showed Leishmania spp. amastigotes in the cytoplasm of macrophages. Culture examination was positive for Leishmania spp. PCR was positive for Leishmania major and Leishmania tropica. The lesions were disguised as basal cell carcinoma, chalazion, hordeolum, and impetigo. The patients were treated with intramuscular meglumine antimoniate (20 mg/kg/day) for at least 3 weeks. They showed a dramatic response, and the lesions almost completely disappeared. We emphasized the importance of clinical and diagnostic features of lesions, characterized the phylogenetic relationship of isolated parasites, and reviewed the literature on ocular leishmaniasis.Entities:
Keywords: Iran; Leishmania major; Leishmania tropica; PCR; cutaneous leishmaniasis; eyelid
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Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28095664 PMCID: PMC5266367 DOI: 10.3347/kjp.2016.54.6.787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Parasitol ISSN: 0023-4001 Impact factor: 1.341
Fig. 1Lesions of eyelid cutaneous leishmaniasis in our patients. (A) Left upper lid ulcerative nodule masquerading as basal cell carcinoma in case 1. (B) An erythematous right upper eyelid ulcerative plaque with overlying yellow crusting lesions in case 2. (C) An erythematous left superior eyelid ulcerated plaque lesion with skin flakes and mild ptosis in case 3. (D) An erythematous ulcerative plaque of the left lower eyelid concealed with yellow crusting lesions in case 4. (E) An erythematous right lower eyelid swelling with blepharoconjunctivitis in case 5. (F) A hordeolum-like nodule involving the left lower eyelid in case 6.
Fig. 2Touch impression smear in case 2. Numerous intracellular and scattered extracellular amastigotes are seen (Giemsa stain; original magnification, ×1,000). Kinetoplasts are visible in many amastigotes.
Fig. 3Electrophoresis of PCR products of DNA extracted from positive smears and cultures. The 4 lanes contained the products from positive controls of L. tropica (lane 3) and L. major (lane 4), ocular lesions due to L. major and L. tropica (lanes 1 and 2, respectively), and a molecular size ladder (MM).
Fig. 4Phylogenetic relationship among various Leishmania species to each other as inferred by neighbor-joining tree based on minicircle kDNA gene. Numbers on branches are percentage bootstrap values of 1,000 replicates. All positions with less than 95% site coverage were eliminated. The evolutionary distances between sequences were computed using the maximum composite likelihood method and are in the units of the number of base substitutions per site. The scale bar indicates an evolutionary distance of 0.10 nucleotides per position in the sequence. The reference sequences accession numbers are inserted. Evolutionary analyses were conducted in MEGA-7.