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Images in Clinical Medicine
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Volume 350:1442 April 1, 2004 Number 14
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A Medical Mystery — Painless Ulcers

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A 23-year-old Peace Corps volunteer lived in a traditional mud hut with a thatched roof in a rural savannah village in Gambia. Several painless ulcers developed on his lower legs during a three-month period. The lesions did not respond to local antimicrobial therapy (2 percent fucidic acid ointment applied four times daily for one week) or systemic antimicrobial therapy (500 mg of floxacillin four times a day for two weeks). A typical lesion was a clean ulcer with a raised, purplish, indurated edge. The diameter was similar to that of a Gambian dalasi, which is 3.1 cm. The patient had . . . [Full Text of this Article]

 

Related Letters:

Medical Mystery: Painless Ulcers — The Answer
Morris-Jones S., Weber M.
Extract | Full Text | PDF  
N Engl J Med 2004; 350:2313-2314, May 27, 2004. Correspondence

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