prothionamide and Leprosy--Borderline

prothionamide has been researched along with Leprosy--Borderline* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for prothionamide and Leprosy--Borderline

ArticleYear
A case of relapse with drug-susceptible M. leprae after multidrug therapy.
    International journal of leprosy and other mycobacterial diseases : official organ of the International Leprosy Association, 1991, Volume: 59, Issue:2

    A male born in 1930 was diagnosed as smear-positive borderline leprosy in 1971, and was treated with dapsone and/or sulfamethoxypyridazine from 1972 to 1980 with clinical improvement. However, new skin lesions with smears strongly positive appeared in August 1980, and he was diagnosed as having downgraded to lepromatous (LL) leprosy, but the bacilli recovered from the skin biopsy were fully susceptible to both dapsone and rifampin by mouse foot pad technique. Between 1981 and 1983, the patient was treated with 24 months of rifampin 600 mg and dapsone 100 mg daily, supplemented with prothionamide 500 mg daily during the initial 3 months, and his skin lesions gradually improved during treatment with the combined regimen. Afterward, the patient was kept under surveillance without treatment. From 1984 to 1986, his skin smears were negative, and no bacilli could be found from a skin biopsy taken in 1985. Then in 1987, 52 months after stopping treatment, new skin lesions appeared with a high concentration of Mycobacterium leprae (2 x 10(6)/mg tissue). The drug-susceptibility test again demonstrated that the organisms were fully susceptible to both dapsone and rifampin. Apparently the relapse was due to remultiplication of drug-susceptible persisters.

    Topics: Adult; Dapsone; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Leprosy, Borderline; Leprosy, Lepromatous; Male; Mycobacterium leprae; Prothionamide; Recurrence; Rifampin; Sulfamethoxypyridazine

1991
Isoprodian and rifampicin in the treatment of leprosy: a descriptive evaluation of therapy durations in 475 Paraguayan leprosy patients.
    Chemotherapy, 1989, Volume: 35, Issue:5

    In Paraguay, the National Leprosy/Tuberculosis Program is based on a combined chemotherapy with isoprodian and rifampicin. The aim of this descriptive study was to investigate the therapy durations used so far in the treatment of 475 leprosy patients and to analyze the criteria responsible for the wide-ranging differences in therapy durations. As initial criteria, the following parameters were identified to have a significant influence on the therapy duration: Patients never treated before or pretreated, clinical classification and initial bacteriological index (BI) value. During therapy, conditions like the attendance and BI decrease/year showed a significant correlation with the therapy duration. Even though the studied criteria did not allow to draw a definite conclusion with regard to an 'ideal' therapy duration, they proved to be reliable, as only 2 patients have relapsed so far.

    Topics: Dapsone; Drug Combinations; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Isoniazid; Isonicotinic Acids; Leprostatic Agents; Leprosy; Leprosy, Borderline; Leprosy, Lepromatous; Leprosy, Tuberculoid; Mycobacterium leprae; Paraguay; Patient Compliance; Prothionamide; Rifampin; Time Factors

1989