LEPROSY SYMPTOMS
Leprosy is an infectious disease that causes severe, disfiguring skin sores and nerve damage
in the arms and legs. The disease has been around since ancient times,
often surrounded by terrifying, negative stigmas and tales of leprosy
patients being shunned as outcasts. Outbreaks of leprosy have affected,
and panicked, people on every continent. The oldest civilizations of
China, Egypt, and India feared leprosy was an incurable, mutilating, and
contagious disease.
However,
leprosy is actually not that contagious. You can catch it only if you
come into close and repeated contact with nose and mouth droplets from
someone with untreated leprosy. Children are more likely to get leprosy
than adults.
What Causes Leprosy?
Leprosy is caused by a slow-growing type of bacteria called Mycobacterium leprae (M. leprae). Leprosy is also known as Hansen's disease, after the scientist who discovered M. leprae in 1873.
What Are the Symptoms of Leprosy?
Leprosy primarily affects the skin and the nerves outside the brain and spinal cord, called the peripheral nerves. It may also strike the eyes and the thin tissue lining the inside of the nose.
The
main symptom of leprosy is disfiguring skin sores, lumps, or bumps that
do not go away after several weeks or months. The skin sores are
pale-colored.
Nerve damage can lead to:
- Loss of feeling in the arms and legs
- Muscle weakness
It
usually takes about 3 to 5 years for symptoms to appear after coming
into contact with the leprosy-causing bacteria. Some people do not
develop symptoms until 20 years later. The time between contact with the
bacteria and the appearance of symptoms is called the incubation
period. Leprosy's long incubation period makes it very difficult for
doctors to determine when and where a person with leprosy got infected.
Forms of Leprosy
Leprosy
is defined by the number and type of skin sores you have. Specific
symptoms and treatment depend on the type of leprosy you have. The types
are:
Tuberculoid. A mild, less severe form of
leprosy. People with this type have only one or a few patches of flat,
pale-colored skin (paucibacillary leprosy). The affected area of skin
may feel numb because of nerve damage underneath. Tuberculoid leprosy is
less contagious than other forms.
Lepromatous. A more severe form of the disease. It has widespread skin bumps and rashes (multibacillary leprosy), numbness, and muscle weakness. The nose, kidneys, and male reproductive organs may also be affected. It is more contagious than tuberculoid leprosy.
Borderline. People with this type of leprosy have symptoms of both the tuberculoid and lepromatous forms.
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