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Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 8(3), 1959, pp. 358-363
Copyright © 1959 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

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Relapse of Leprosy in American Samoa

Robert B. Price* AND Reupena Iosefa, Samoan Medical Practitioner

The incidence of known leprosy in American Samoa was 5.3 per thousand. There were 24 open cases. Of old, outpatient, lepromatous cases, 25% had undergone frank clinical and histological relapse, and 41.7% were bacteriologically positive. Only 9% of old tuberculoid cases showed histological evidence of activity.

Lepromatous leprosy exhibits a strong tendency to relapse when suppressive sulfone chemotherapy is discontinued, even if the patient has previously received chemotherapy for as long as 5 years. Tuberculoid leprosy, on the contrary, tends to undergo arrest of activity, even when chemotherapy has been of brief duration and long since discontinued. Neglect of patient follow-up results in rapid deterioration of leprosy control.


* Formerly Chief of Medical Service, Hospital of American Samoa. Present address: 2101 Travis St., Amarillo, Texas.




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H. A. REIMANN
Infectious Diseases: Twenty-Fifth Annual Review of Significant Publications
Arch Intern Med, November 1, 1960; 106(5): 679 - 713.
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Copyright © 1959 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.