Article
Histopathological examination of nerve samples from pure neural leprosy patients: obtaining maximum information to improve diagnostic efficiency
Registro en:
ANTUNES, Sérgio Luiz Gomes; et al. Histopathological examination of nerve samples from pure neural leprosy patients: obtaining maximum information to improve diagnostic efficiency. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz, v.107, n.2, p. 246-253, Mar. 2012.
1678-8060
10.1590/S0074-02762012000200015
Autor
Antunes, Sérgio Luiz Gomes
Chimelli, Leila
Jardim, Márcia Rodrigues
Vital, Robson Teixeira
Nery, José Augusto da Costa
Corte-Real, Suzana
Hacker, Mariana Andréa Vilas Boas
Sarno, Euzenir Nunes
Resumen
Nerve biopsy examination is an important auxiliary procedure for diagnosing pure neural leprosy (PNL). When
acid-fast bacilli (AFB) are not detected in the nerve sample, the value of other nonspecific histological alterations
should be considered along with pertinent clinical, electroneuromyographical and laboratory data (the detection
of Mycobacterium leprae DNA with polymerase chain reaction and the detection of serum anti-phenolic glycolipid
1 antibodies) to support a possible or probable PNL diagnosis. Three hundred forty nerve samples [144 from PNL
patients and 196 from patients with non-leprosy peripheral neuropathies (NLN)] were examined. Both AFB-negative
and AFB-positive PNL samples had more frequent histopathological alterations (epithelioid granulomas, mononuclear
infiltrates, fibrosis, perineurial and subperineurial oedema and decreased numbers of myelinated fibres) than
the NLN group. Multivariate analysis revealed that independently, mononuclear infiltrate and perineurial fibrosis
were more common in the PNL group and were able to correctly classify AFB-negative PNL samples. These results
indicate that even in the absence of AFB, these histopathological nerve alterations may justify a PNL diagnosis when
observed in conjunction with pertinent clinical, epidemiological and laboratory data.