TY - JOUR KW - Aged KW - Bacteremia KW - Fatal Outcome KW - Humans KW - Leprosy, lepromatous KW - Male KW - Necrosis KW - Skin Ulcer KW - Staphylococcal Skin Infections KW - Treatment Refusal AU - Kumari R AU - Thappa DM AU - Basu D AB -

A 65-year-old man presented with cutaneous ulcerations involving the legs, hands, abdomen, buttocks, and pinna, along with fever, arthralgia, and anorexia for the prior 10 days. On cutaneous examination, dark, irregular-shaped bizarre erythematous purpuric spots and angulated ulcers were seen over bilateral, upper extremities and trunk including dorsum of hands, finger tips and the pinnae of both ears. Most striking were the presence of multiple deep ulcers covered with a blackish eschar and in some areas yellow slough eroding the subcutaneous tissue with ragged margins. These ulcers were distributed symmetrically over the thighs, lower legs and gluteal region. Slit-skin smear examination revealed a bacterial index (BI) of 6+ with globi from earlobes, ulcers 3+, eyebrows 3+ and normal skin 2+ and morphologically showed mainly solid (20-30%), fragmented (60-70%) and granular (5-10%) acid-fast bacilli. Biopsy from the ulcer margin revealed an ulcerated epidermis and dermis. The dermis had infiltrate of foamy macrophages, and evidence of ischemic necrotizing vasculitis, with fibrinoid necrosis and new vessel formation. There was presence of clumps of acid-fast bacilli (AFB) within macrophages, periadnexally, perivascularly, and also within endothelial cells. These clinical and histopathological features helped us to arrive at the diagnosis of Lucio phenomenon in an untreated case of Lucio leprosy which is rarely reported from areas other than Mexico.

BT - Dermatology online journal C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18700113?dopt=Abstract DA - 2008 Feb 28 IS - 2 J2 - Dermatol. Online J. LA - eng N2 -

A 65-year-old man presented with cutaneous ulcerations involving the legs, hands, abdomen, buttocks, and pinna, along with fever, arthralgia, and anorexia for the prior 10 days. On cutaneous examination, dark, irregular-shaped bizarre erythematous purpuric spots and angulated ulcers were seen over bilateral, upper extremities and trunk including dorsum of hands, finger tips and the pinnae of both ears. Most striking were the presence of multiple deep ulcers covered with a blackish eschar and in some areas yellow slough eroding the subcutaneous tissue with ragged margins. These ulcers were distributed symmetrically over the thighs, lower legs and gluteal region. Slit-skin smear examination revealed a bacterial index (BI) of 6+ with globi from earlobes, ulcers 3+, eyebrows 3+ and normal skin 2+ and morphologically showed mainly solid (20-30%), fragmented (60-70%) and granular (5-10%) acid-fast bacilli. Biopsy from the ulcer margin revealed an ulcerated epidermis and dermis. The dermis had infiltrate of foamy macrophages, and evidence of ischemic necrotizing vasculitis, with fibrinoid necrosis and new vessel formation. There was presence of clumps of acid-fast bacilli (AFB) within macrophages, periadnexally, perivascularly, and also within endothelial cells. These clinical and histopathological features helped us to arrive at the diagnosis of Lucio phenomenon in an untreated case of Lucio leprosy which is rarely reported from areas other than Mexico.

PY - 2008 EP - 10 T2 - Dermatology online journal TI - A fatal case of Lucio phenomenon from India. VL - 14 SN - 1087-2108 ER -