Seventy to eighty percent of all leprosy cases are of the Seventy to eighty percent of all leprosy cases are of the tuberculoid type.
India and Brazil have the highest number of leprosy cases globally. Both countries account for a significant portion of the world's leprosy cases due to factors such as population density, poverty, and limited access to healthcare services.
Thalidomide is effective in some cases.
In 99% of cases, no. Leprosy is caused by airborne contraction. Poor lifestyle choices may increase chance of illness. Almost everyone with leprosy has no control over it unless with the help of a physician.
Leprosy, also known as Hansen's disease, is a bacterial infection. It is curable and not highly communicable. According to the World Health Organization, there were about 890,000 identified cases world-wide in 1997, with the vast majority of those cases in India, Indonesia, and Myanamar.
Although it is rare in industrialized nations, Leprosy (also called 'Hansen's disease') is a chronic bacterial disease of the skin, the nerves in the hands and feet and, in some cases, the lining of the nose. It is unknown exactly how leprosy is spread, but it is thought that the germ enters the nasal passages or open skin through the air.
In cases of TT leprosy, a diagnosis is made based on the clinical signs and symptoms, the type and distribution of skin lesions, and history of having lived in an endemic area.
The scientific name for leprosy is Mycobacterium leprae. It is a slow-growing bacterium that affects the skin and nerves, causing skin lesions and nerve damage in severe cases.
lower, we actually found a cure some 100 years ago
Cases also occur in some areas of the Caribbean.
The American Cancer Society estimates that approximately 1 million cases of cancer are diagnosed each year. Seventy-seven percent of cancers are diagnosed in men and women over the age of 55
In 2003, scientists conducting a genome scan of a large Vietnamese family with many cases of leprosy found that susceptibility to the disease was linked to region q25 on the long arm of chromosome 6.