TY - JOUR
T1 - Ultrasonography for the Monitoring of Subcutaneous Damage in Mycobacterium Ulcerans Infection (Buruli Ulcer)
AU - Leigheb, Giorgio
AU - Cammarota, Teresa
AU - Zavattaro, Elisa
AU - Sarno, Antonino
AU - Carriero, Alessandro
AU - Gambaro, Anna Clelia Lucia
AU - Dossou, Ange
AU - Poggio, Francesco
AU - Clemente, Claudio
AU - Johnson, Roch Christian
AU - Sopoh, Ghislain
AU - Leigheb, Fabrizio
PY - 2008/10
Y1 - 2008/10
N2 - We used ultrasonography to evaluate the nature and the extent of subcutaneous damage provoked by Mycobacterium ulcerans (M. ulcerans) and to investigate the possible involvement of the tributary lymph nodes during the various stages of progression of Buruli ulcer. Nineteen patients affected by M. ulcerans infection in Benin, West Africa, were studied. Ultrasonography was performed on all subjects, except one, at the site of nonulcerated lesions and/or at perilesional site. The tributary lymph nodes were also studied in six patients. Ultrasound (US) evaluation was carried out using a 10 MHz linear probe and all lesions were compared with the homologous unaffected controlateral site. The ultrasonography showed relevant alterations at the dermo-hypodermic level, in agreement with histological specimens. In the active forms of the disease, these alterations are characterized by significant oedematous imbibition of the adipose tissue and necrosis (adiponecrosis) that leads to varying irregularities in the echogenicity of the hypodermis, which is generally thicker. In agreement with the clinical examination, the lymph nodes in six patients evaluated, despite their possible histological involvement with necrotic phenomena described in literature in M. ulcerans infection, did not display significant alterations visible by ultrasonography. The US scanning we have performed is the first use of this technique for M. ulcerans infection. We have shown that it can reveal the subcutaneous depth and the peripheral extent of the pathological process and it is particularly useful for monitoring the efficacy of or resistance to antibiotic treatment, especially in extensive ulcero-oedomatose forms. Such monitoring offers also a useful guide to the surgeon allowing the reduction or postponement of the removal of the large cutaneous areas that were carried out until recently. (E-mail: [email protected]).
AB - We used ultrasonography to evaluate the nature and the extent of subcutaneous damage provoked by Mycobacterium ulcerans (M. ulcerans) and to investigate the possible involvement of the tributary lymph nodes during the various stages of progression of Buruli ulcer. Nineteen patients affected by M. ulcerans infection in Benin, West Africa, were studied. Ultrasonography was performed on all subjects, except one, at the site of nonulcerated lesions and/or at perilesional site. The tributary lymph nodes were also studied in six patients. Ultrasound (US) evaluation was carried out using a 10 MHz linear probe and all lesions were compared with the homologous unaffected controlateral site. The ultrasonography showed relevant alterations at the dermo-hypodermic level, in agreement with histological specimens. In the active forms of the disease, these alterations are characterized by significant oedematous imbibition of the adipose tissue and necrosis (adiponecrosis) that leads to varying irregularities in the echogenicity of the hypodermis, which is generally thicker. In agreement with the clinical examination, the lymph nodes in six patients evaluated, despite their possible histological involvement with necrotic phenomena described in literature in M. ulcerans infection, did not display significant alterations visible by ultrasonography. The US scanning we have performed is the first use of this technique for M. ulcerans infection. We have shown that it can reveal the subcutaneous depth and the peripheral extent of the pathological process and it is particularly useful for monitoring the efficacy of or resistance to antibiotic treatment, especially in extensive ulcero-oedomatose forms. Such monitoring offers also a useful guide to the surgeon allowing the reduction or postponement of the removal of the large cutaneous areas that were carried out until recently. (E-mail: [email protected]).
KW - Adiponecrosis
KW - Buruli ulcer
KW - Lymphoedema
KW - Mycobacterium ulcerans infection
KW - Skin sonography
KW - Soft tissue
KW - Ultrasonography
KW - Ultrasound
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=52249108099&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2008.03.010
DO - 10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2008.03.010
M3 - Article
SN - 0301-5629
VL - 34
SP - 1554
EP - 1563
JO - Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
JF - Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
IS - 10
ER -