Leprosy Mailing List – May 3rd,
2012
Ref.: ENL
or relapse in a BL/LL patient?
From: G Warren, Sydney, Australia
From: G Warren, Sydney, Australia
Dear Salvatore,
I refer to the letter from Dr Kawuma in Uganda (LML
May 3rd, 2012).
Yes, definitely down grading reaction can occur and it
frequently did in the “old days” when a patient was receiving one
drug only, when the patient developed resistance to that drug. In the
1960s it was usually dapsone but, also downgrading reaction occurred to
some of the other drugs in which initial improvement had appeared to occur
and then the patients would down grade till we changed the antileprosy drug
therapy. It usually required several years for such resistance to show
up.
It also occurred in patients who had been given
multidrug therapy because they were not responding to dapsone and so were
considered dapsone resistant; though there was no ability to test for
resistance to dapsone. After a period often a year or two the disease
seemed under control and the patient stopped drug therapy (often just by
dropping out himself but sometimes by completing the 12 months recommended
for MDT). But after several years the patient would reappear with
what was said to be ENL; but on careful testing one would find the
bacteriological index (BI) was higher than it had been at the last test.
It is fascinating how one can separate between new
lesions of downgrading BL/LL and the lesions of ENL that look
similar. Restarting adequate anti-leprosy medication
especially including the use of clofazamine, seemed to rapidly deal with
the problem that was apparently resistance to dapsone and the multidrug therapy
had not been given long enough.
I hope that will help. When a patient
returns with what is queried to be ENL or relapse in a BL/LL patient who
has completed the recommended 12 months MDT it is wise to check the lesions for
infiltration, by pressing a glass slide onto the lesions. The pressure of
a slide will define the edge of the lesion. If it is ENL there will be a
well localised small patch of infiltration but, if it is a new lesion ie
true relapse, it will not be so definite and not so erythematous.
We need to be on the watch for such relapses!
Grace Warren
Previously Superintendent Hong Kong Leprosarium
1960-1975.
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