Abstract

Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL), characterized by an ulcerated lesion, is the most common clinical form of human leishmaniasis. Before the ulcer develops, patients infected with Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis present a small papule at the site of the sandfly bite, referred to as early cutaneous leishmaniasis (E-CL). Two to four weeks later the typical ulcer develops, which is considered here as late CL (L-CL). Although there is a great deal known about T-cell responses in patients with L-CL, there is little information about the in situ inflammatory response in E-CL. Histological sections of skin biopsies from 15 E-CL and 28 L-CL patients were stained by hematoxilin and eosin to measure the area infiltrated by cells, as well as tissue necrosis. Leishmania braziliensis amastigotes, CD4+, CD8+, CD20+, and CD68+ cells were identified and quantified by immunohistochemistry. The number of amastigotes in E-CL was higher than in L-CL, and the inflammation area was larger in classical ulcers than in E-CL. There was no relationship between the number of parasites and magnitude of the inflammation area, or with the lesion size. However, there was a direct correlation between the number of macrophages and the lesion size in E-CL, and between the number of macrophages and necrotic area throughout the course of the disease. These positive correlations suggest that macrophages are directly involved in the pathology of L. braziliensis–induced lesions.

Highlights

  • Leishmaniasis is a broad term for anthropological zoonotic diseases caused by trypanosomes of the genus Leishmania

  • Patients infected with Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis present a small papule at the site of the sandfly bite, referred to as early cutaneous leishmaniasis (E-Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL))

  • Males were more affected by the disease than women and the predominant localization of the lesions was in the lower limbs in both in E-CL and late CL (L-CL)

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Summary

Introduction

Leishmaniasis is a broad term for anthropological zoonotic diseases caused by trypanosomes of the genus Leishmania. CL is the main clinical form of the disease and it is characterized by one or more well-limited ulcers with raised borders, which develop at the site of the bite of infected sandfly. Before the classical ulcer appears, patients often develop a lymphadenopathy in the lymph nodes draining the infection site, followed by the appearance of a nodule with a small superficial ulceration, which characterizes early CL (E-CL).[1,2] The initial lesion increases in size and depth and between 4 and 6 weeks after the sandfly bite eventually forms an ulcer, the primary feature of late CL (L-CL). There was a direct correlation between the number of macrophages with the area of necrosis and size of the ulcers

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