Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
Images in Dermatology
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Media and news
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
Images in Dermatology
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Media and news
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
View/Download PDF

Translate this page into:

Letter to the Editor
2011:77:5;604-607
doi: 10.4103/0378-6323.84076
PMID: 21860164

Study of the density and distribution of Mycobacterium leprae in the epidermis and skin appendages in lepromatous patients

Mohamed A El-Khalawany1 , Amany A Abou-Bakr2
1 Department of Dermatology, Farwaniya Hospital, Kuwait
2 Department of Pathology, Farwaniya Hospital, Kuwait

Correspondence Address:
Mohamed A El-Khalawany
Department of Dermatology, Farwaniya Hospital
Kuwait
How to cite this article:
El-Khalawany MA, Abou-Bakr AA. Study of the density and distribution of Mycobacterium leprae in the epidermis and skin appendages in lepromatous patients. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2011;77:604-607
Copyright: (C)2011 Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology, and Leprology

Sir,

The role of skin in the transmission of leprosy through direct contact is thought to be rare and it was believed that intact skin is not considered as a major portal of exit of Mycobacterium leprae due to the inability of M. Leprae to pass through it.

We studied the density and distribution of M. leprae in the epidermis and skin appendages of 42 cases of multibacillary leprosy (ML) to assess the possible route of disease transmission through the skin surface or its appendageal secretion.

The study was conducted in Farwaniya hospital, Kuwait, which is not considered as an endemic area of leprosy, but the disease was observed in immigrants, mostly Indians and Egyptians. According to Ridley-Jopling classification, 23 cases were borderline lepromatous leprosy and 19 cases were lepromatous leprosy (LL). All cases showed multiple bilateral reddish infiltrated papulonodular skin lesions distributed on the extremities (11 cases), trunk and extremities (14 cases), and generalized including the face (17 cases).

One biopsy was taken from each patient, and a minimum of six sections were prepared from each block and stained with modified Ziehl-Nielsen (Fite) stain to allow better evaluation and counting of lepra bacilli in the different levels of epidermis and skin appendages. The positive finding and density of M. leprae in the epidermis and skin appendages (hair follicle, sweat glands, and sebaceous glands) were recorded for each case. The density was calculated by visual counting of all bacilli (fragmented or intact) per high-power field (HPF) (x100) in 10 different sections in each slide, and then the mean ± SD was recorded.

M. leprae were observed in 17 cases (40.4%) in the epidermis, 7 cases (16.6%) in the papillary dermis, 29 cases (69%) in hair follicles, 6 cases (14.3%) in sweat glands, and 2 cases (4.7%) in sebaceous glands. The density of M. leprae was greatly varied in these structures; the epidermis showed bacilli ranging from 5 to 28 bacilli/HPF (mean 12 ± 4.7) which were more concentrated in the horny layer, but most of them were fragmented or cracked [Figure - 1]a. In four cases, M. leprae were seen in Langerhans cells (LC) that were identified by their mid-epidermal location and clear cytoplasm [Figure - 1]b. Sebaceous and sweat glands showed less density of bacilli ranging from 1 to 12 bacilli/HPF (mean 4 ± 1.3), and most of them were fragmented and distributed in between glandular epithelium more than in the lumen [Figure - 2]. Hair follicles showed higher concentration of bacilli in the skin with density more than 100 bacilli/HPF (mean 35±12.8). They also showed more intact and viable bacilli that were more concentrated in the hair bulb and external root sheath and forming globi or clumps that were observed in the basal layer of follicular epithelium [Figure - 3]a and b. The clinical and histological findings are summarized in [Table - 1].

Figure 1: (a) Numerous M. leprae in the epidermis which are more concentrated in the horny layer and (b) one lepra bacillus in the Langerhans cells in the mid-epidermis (Fite stain ×1000)
Figure 2: Few fragmented lepra bacilli in the sweat glands, observed more in the glandular epithelium (Fite stain ×1000)
Figure 3: Numerous M. leprae in the hair follicles which were more concentrated in the basal keratinocytes (a) with formation of globi (b) (Fite stain ×1000)
Table 1: The clinical and histological findings of 42 patients with multibacillary leprosy

These results suggested the significant role of follicular epithelium in harboring lepra bacilli and they may play a role in distributing these bacilli onto the surface epidermis. Gummer et al.[1] found M. leprae in the dermal papilla and outer root sheath, while they were rarely found in hair shaft and inner root sheath of both anagen and telogen hair follicles of eyebrows. They suggested that hair follicle is unlikely to have a role in the dissemination of M. leprae, but it may be important in providing a suitable site for the incubation of the bacillus within the dermis.

We observed M. leprae as crooked or fragmented bacilli in the epidermal cells without clumping or globi formation. The presence of M. leprae in epidermal cells was considered unusual and it was attributed to the phagocytic activity of keratinocytes, which engulf bacilli from the subepidermal zone, or due to the ability of M. leprae to invade the epidermal cells. [2]

Our results showed a negligible role of sweat and sebaceous glands in harboring lepra bacilli, but it was confirmed that M. leprae are discharged and disseminated through glandular secretions and it was reported that the intraepidermal eccrine sweat duct (acrosyringium) showed a high density of lepra bacilli. [3]

Although it was suggested that nasal secretions are a major source of infection while intact skin is negligible and insignificant as a source of infection, there are other studies that challenge this concept and suggest that the number of bacilli discharged from the intact skin seems adequate for the transmission of leprosy considering the large surface area of the skin. [4] Moreover, it was found that 80% of untreated ML patients and 17% of contacts had M. leprae in skin washings by using polymerase chain reaction. [5]

LC are phagocytic cells and we observed M. leprae in LC in few cases and this may have contributed to the low density of LC in LL patients caused by the absence of T-helper cells, [6] but the exact relationship between LC and lepra bacilli may need more wide-scale study in an endemic area of leprosy. On the basis of the previous reports in addition to our results, it seems that the role of skin in the transmission of M. leprae should be considered and skin appendages, specially hair follicles, have a major role in the incubation of lepra bacilli in lepromatous leprosy patient .

References
1.
Gummer CL, Starley JN, Dawber RP, Pearson JM. The distribution of Mycobacterium leprae in the hair follicle of the eyebrow. Int J Lepr Other Mycobact Dis 1983;51:205-10.
[Google Scholar]
2.
Satapathy J, Kar BR, Job CK. Presence of Mycobacterium leprae in epidermal cells of lepromatous skin and its significance. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2005;71:267-9.
[Google Scholar]
3.
Hosokawa A. A clinical and bacteriological examination of Mycobacterium leprae in the epidermis and cutaneous appendages of patients with multibacillary leprosy. J Dermatol 1999;26:479-88.
[Google Scholar]
4.
Hameedullah A, Lal S, Garg BR. Composite skin contact smears in multibacillary leprosy patients. Lepr India 1982;54:605-12.
[Google Scholar]
5.
Job CK, Jayakumar J, Kearney M, Gillis TP. Transmission of leprosy. A study of skin and nasal secretions of household contacts of leprosy patients using PCR. Am J Trop Med Hyg 2008;78:518-21.
[Google Scholar]
6.
MF, Gigli I, Tausk FA. Differential expression of Langerhans cells in the epidermis of patients with leprosy. Br J Dermatol 1989;121:19-26.
[Google Scholar]

Fulltext Views
1,612

PDF downloads
957
Show Sections