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Special Report

Old World cutaneous leishmaniasis in American soldiers underscores diagnostic and therapeutic options

Pages 355-360 | Published online: 10 Jan 2014
 

Abstract

Cutaneous leishmaniasis, a parasitic skin disease that was rare in American soldiers who served in Gulf War I (1991), has been more common in Gulf War II (Operation Iraqi Freedom began in 2003). This has prompted interest among military and civilian clinicians in becoming reacquainted with the clinical features of cutaneous leishmaniasis, as well as diagnostic and treatment options. In the US Army, well-established diagnostic procedures include the Giemsa-stained lesional skin smear or punch biopsy, as well as polymerase chain reaction. Therapies for cutaneous leishmaniasis used to treat soldiers include local heat application (ThermoMed™), cryotherapy (liquid nitrogen), oral fluconazole or itraconazole, and intravenous sodium stibogluconate (pentavalent antimony, Pentostam®). Paromomycin, a promising antileishmania aminoglycoside topical preparation, already commercially available in some countries, is under investigation by the US Army as a combined paromomycin–gentamicin topical formulation. This commentary focuses on current and developing diagnostic and therapeutic options intended for clinicians who may encounter active-duty soldiers, deactivated reservists re-entering the civilian sector, or civilians returning from the Middle East or Southwest Asia with skin lesions suggestive of, or diagnosed as, cutaneous leishmaniasis.

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