Treatment with antithyroid drugs may be accompanied by side effects. We present a
patient diagnosed with Grave's Disease who developed extensive vasculitis in the
lower limbs during methimazole use. After suspension of the methimazole and the
introduction of prednisone in immunesupressor doses the cutaneous lesions started to
involute.
Although New World cutaneous leishmaniasis is not itself a life-threatening disease, its treatment with systemic antimonials can cause toxicity that can be dangerous to some patients. Intralesional meglumine antimoniate provides a viable, less toxic alternative. Herein, we describe an alternative treatment with subcutaneous intralesional injections of meglumine antimoniate into large periarticular lesions of three patients with cutaneous leishmaniasis and comorbidities. This treatment was safe, successful, and well tolerated. This case series suggests that intralesional meglumine antimoniate is an effective therapy for cutaneous leishmaniasis, even with periarticular lesions. This hypothesis should be tested in controlled clinical trials.
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