Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (Apr 2014)

Comparative analysis of the tissue inflammatory response in human cutaneous and disseminated leishmaniasis

  • Marina Loyola Dantas,
  • Juliana Menezes Gomes Cabral de Oliveira,
  • Lucas Carvalho,
  • Sara Timóteo Passos,
  • Adriano Queiroz,
  • Luiz Henrique Guimarães,
  • Paulo Machado,
  • Edgar Carvalho,
  • Sérgio Arruda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0074-0276130312
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 109, no. 2
pp. 202 – 209

Abstract

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Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is the most frequent clinical form of tegumentary leishmaniasis and is characterised by a single or a few ulcerated skin lesions that may disseminate into multiple ulcers and papules, which characterise disseminated leishmaniasis (DL). In this study, cells were quantified using immunohistochemistry and haematoxylin and eosin staining (CD4+, CD68+, CD20+, plasma cells and neutrophils) and histopathology was used to determine the level of inflammation in biopsies from patients with early CL, late CL and DL (ulcers and papules). The histopathology showed differences in the epidermis between the papules and ulcers from DL. An analysis of the cells present in the tissues showed similarities between the ulcers from localised CL (LCL) and DL. The papules had fewer CD4+ T cells than the DL ulcers. Although both CD4+ cells and macrophages contribute to inflammation in early CL, macrophages are the primary cell type associated with inflammation intensity in late ulcers. The higher frequency of CD20+ cells and plasma cells in lesions demonstrates the importance of B cells in the pathogenesis of leishmaniasis. The number of neutrophils was the same in all of the analysed groups. A comparison between the ulcers from LCL and DL and the early ulcers and papules shows that few differences between these two clinical forms can be distinguished by observing only the tissue.

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