leprosy is being treated well and their medicine costs £21 each. A helping organisation is Lepra. People with leprosy take this medicine daily for as long as they need,
Patients with MB leprosy are usually treated with all three drugs, while patients with PB leprosy are only given rifampin and dapsone.
Severe ulcers caused by leprosy may be treated surgically with small skin grafts.
Leprosy is a bacterial infection. These days, it can be treated with antibiotics, so the chance of someone dying from leprosy is very low.
Leprosy is lethal if you can't get it treated because your body parts start to fall of and your body falls apart.Ps joshua bolton is awsome
no
yes. if you don't get it treated.
in medieval towns in europe when someone would get leprosy they would be sent to an isalnd where people with leprosy live.
Gangrene may occur from the inadequate treatment of leprosy, causing body tissue to die and become deformed.
Leprosy (now called Hansen's Disease) is easily treated and not easily transmitted among people, despite popular belief. There is an average of about 890,000 worldwide who have the disease - it is rarely fatal.
Inadequate care causes infection of open wounds.
People who are in immediate contact with the leprosy patient should be tested for leprosy.