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         Leprosy:     more books (100)
  1. The leprosy of Miriam by Ursula N. 1845-1921 Gestefeld, 2010-08-27
  2. Insensitive Feet, A Practical Handbook on Foot Problems in Leprosy by Paul Brand, 1984
  3. Gemo: Memories of a Happy Island in the Sun, a Hospital for Treating Leprosy and Tuberculosis Patients in Papua New Guinea by Myra Kennedy Macey, 2008
  4. Leprosy And Its Prevention: Illustrated By Norwegian Experience by Robson Roose, 2008-08-25
  5. The Recrudescence of Leprosy and Its Causation: A Popular Treatise by William Tebb, 2010-04-22
  6. Leprosy in Nepal: Curriculum for Agricultural Rehabilitation by Andreas Jenny, 1996-01-01
  7. Preventing disability in Leprosy patients by Jean M Watson, 1986
  8. Leprosy for Students of Medicine (Medicine in the tropics) by Anthony Bryceson, Roy E. Pfaltzgraff, 1973-07-27
  9. The Recrudescence of Leprosy and Its Causation by William Tebb, 2010-01-12
  10. Mister Leprosy - Dr Stanley Browne's Fight Agains Leprosy by Phyllis Thompson, 1980
  11. Havens of Refuge: History of Leprosy in Western Australia by W.S. Davidson, 1978-12
  12. Prevention of Disabilities in Patients with Leprosy: A Practical Guide by H. Srinivasan, 2006-12
  13. OMSLEP recording and reporting system for leprosy patients by M. F Lechat, 1983
  14. Training Health Workers to Recognize, Treat, Refer and Educate Patients About Ocular Leprosy by Paul Courtright, Susan Lewallen, 1993-04

81. LEPROSY
leprosy is a dreaded, insidious, loathsome disease that is caused by a bacterium, Mycobacterium leprae, which produces a skin and nerve disease that can,
http://www.botgard.ucla.edu/html/botanytextbooks/economicbotany/Hydnocarpus/inde
LEPROSY
Chaulmoogra ( Hydnocarpus anthelmintica FLACOURTIACEAE, Flacourt Family Leprosy is a dreaded, insidious, loathsome disease that is caused by a bacterium, Mycobacterium leprae , which produces a skin and nerve disease that can, if unchecked, lead to permanent disfigurement. The bacterium, which was only discovered in 1874 by a Norwegian physician, Gerhard Hansen, closely resembles the tuberculosis bacillus. There are today about five million known cases of leprosy worldwide (may be over ten million), occurring mostly within the tropical and subtropical climates. If untreated, the disease progresses in the following ways: (1) lack of skin sensitivity to pain; (2) the skin takes on a porcelain-like whiteness; (3) the skin becomes mottled with color; (4) the eyebrows fall off, nasal ulcers develop, and there is facial deformity; and under severe conditions (5) extremities may fall off. Transmission of this disease is only by contact, so that victims are quickly isolated to avoid infection of others. Leprosy was considered an incurable disease 2500 years ago, when it appeared in the Nile Valley. There was an epidemic of leprosy in Europe from 1000 to 1200 A.D., which was probably started by the returning soldiers of the Crusades. Leprosy occurred in Britain from 625 to 1798, and at one time there were 326 lazar houses (leprosaria) in Great Britain. As housing conditions improved, leprosy declined sharply. Very few cases of leprosy are reported now in highly developed societies. About 100 leprosy cases are diagnosed each year in the United States, and most of these are imported with immigrants from Asia. One famous story about leprosy was written about by Robert Louis Stevenson

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