%A Ramesh V %A Saxena U %A Misra RS %A Mukherjee A %A Ravi S %T Multibacillary leprosy presenting as a solitary skin lesion; report of three cases and its significance in control programs %0 Journal Article %D 1991 %J International Journal of Leprosy and other Mycobacterial Diseases %P 0148-916X %V 59 %N 1 %X Three patients with solitary skin lesions showing the cardinal signs of leprosy were seen and clinically classified among the paucibacillary cases. Initially, they were treated with two drugs (rifampin and dapsone) as recommended by the WHO Expert Committee. On the first visit of their follow-up, they were seen to be histopathologically either in the borderline (BB) or borderline lepromatous (BL) group, and acid-fast bacilli were demonstrated in the sections. Later they were put on three drugs (rifampin, dapsone and clofazimine) as given for multibacillary cases, and therapeutically they also behaved like bacilliferous leprosy. Such cases are rare and the reasons for the occurrence are not clear. Further studies on the subtle relationship between the local host factors and the virulence of the organisms grown from these lesions may offer an explanation. In light of these cases and previous reports of even lepromatous leprosy presenting as a single skin lesion, field workers-including both medical and paramedical workers-should carefully perform and interpret slit-skin smears from clinically diagnosed paucibacillary cases so that such unusual presentations of the disease are treated appropriately and not missed.