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How is Podoconiosis treated?

How is Podoconiosis treated?

Treatment includes daily foot hygiene with soap, water, and antiseptics, emollients to restore skin function, leg elevation, exercise, use of socks and shoes, and, if necessary, compression bandages and surgical removal of nodules.

What is Podoconiosis?

Podoconiosis is a type of tropical lymphoedema clinically distinguished from lymphatic filariasis (LF) through being ascending and commonly bilateral but asymmetric.

What causes Podoconiosis?

Podoconiosis is a chronic inflammatory, geochemical skin disease caused by prolonged exposure to irritant red clay soils derived from volcanic rocks [2] and causes bilateral asymmetrical swelling of the lower legs. Podoconiosis is a neglected disease, although currently it does not appear on the WHO list of NTDs.

What disease do filarial worms cause?

Filarial Disease, or the general term “filariasis,” may also refer to a group of parasitic diseases caused by various species of filarial worms (nematodes). These include mumu, loiasis (Calabar swellings), dirofilariasis (human infection by dog heartworm), and onchocerciasis (river blindness).

Is filaria completely curable?

Lymphatic filariasis can be eliminated by stopping the spread of infection through preventive chemotherapy with safe medicine combinations repeated annually. More than 7.7 billion treatments have been delivered to stop the spread of infection since 2000.

Can mossy foot be cured?

The good news about Mossy Foot is that the condition is highly treatable. Not only that, but in the majority of cases simple, inexpensive treatment has dramatic results. Typically, treatment entails: Foot hygiene: regular washing the legs and feet with soap, water, and antiseptics.

Which doctor will treat filaria?

To prevent inappropriate treatment, consult an infectious disease specialist in all cases of suspected filariasis outside of endemic nations. Other possible consultations include: Urologist. Ophthalmologist.

What causes mossy foot?

Unlike lymphatic elephantiasis, which is contracted when a parasitic worm is transmitted to humans by mosquitoes, podoconiosis – also known as “mossy foot” because it causes moss-like warts called hyperkeratotic papilloma – is contracted by walking barefoot on irritant volcanic soils.

How do you get mossy foot?

Mossy foot disease (known technically as podoconiosis) is caused by walking barefoot in the local volcanic soil, and results in massive swelling of the feet and legs, with pain and bad odors. Individuals with the disease, like this man to the left, are shunned like lepers.

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Ruth Doyle