Lucio phenomenon of leprosy LL type on pregnancy: A Rare Case
Author(s) -
Cita Rosita Sigit Prakoeswa,
Nanny Herwanto,
Regitta Indira Agusni,
Fransiska Rismauli Natalya,
Muhammad Yulianto Listiawan,
Dinar Adriaty,
Ratna Wahyuni,
Iswahyudi Iswahyudi,
Indropo Agusni
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
leprosy review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.437
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 2162-8807
pISSN - 0305-7518
DOI - 10.47276/lr.87.4.526
Subject(s) - medicine , leprosy , umbilical cord , histopathology , cord , lesion , pregnancy , dermatology , surgery , pathology , immunology , biology , genetics
Lucio phenomenon is a rare type of reaction in untreated, diffusely infiltrative form of lepromatous leprosy type, characterised with ulcerative type of skin lesions.CaseA 29 year old Indonesian female, 7th months primigravida with a four-month history of painful scarlet spots that darken and ulcerate on both of her hands and legs. The patient was experiencing fever. The patient’s eyebrows were lost and her earlobes were thickened 3 years ago. Slit-skin smear: BI 6þ,MI 7%. Histopathology: Lucio phenomenon. PCR detecting M. leprae DNA on skin lesion and amniotic fluid:positive; umbilical cord membrane and umbilical cord: negative. Anti-PGL-1 IgM and IgG: patient: 4,854 U/mL and 1,061 U/mL, respectively; 5 month-old baby: 5 U/mL and 1,724 U/mL, respectively; 1 year-old baby: 0 U/mL and 3 U/mL, respectively.ConclusionPlacenta is considered a protective barrier toward feto-maternal transmission of M. leprae. The baby had the passive antibody to M. leprae from the mother’s blood transmitted through the umbilical cord as demonstrated by the presence of anti-PGL-1 IgG antibody.
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