Mycobacterium ulcerans causes slowly progressive, destructive skin and soft tissue infections, known as Bairnsdale or Buruli ulcer (BU).
Forty‐six delegates with experience in the management of BU attended a 1‐day conference in Melbourne on 10 February 2006, with the aim of developing a consensus approach to the diagnosis, treatment and control of BU. An initial draft document was extended and improved during a facilitated round table discussion.
BU is an environmental infection that occurs in specific locations. The main risk factor for infection is contact with an endemic area.
Prompt cleaning of abrasions sustained outdoors, wearing protective clothing, and avoiding mosquito bites may reduce an individual's risk of infection.
BU can be rapidly and accurately diagnosed by polymerase chain reaction testing of ulcer swabs or biopsies.
Best outcomes are obtained when the diagnosis is made early. To aid early diagnosis, health authorities should keep local populations informed of new outbreaks.
BU is best treated with surgical excision, which, if possible, should include a small rim of healthy tissue. For small lesions this may be all that is required. However, there is a role for antibiotics for more extensive disease, and their use may allow more conservative surgery.
• Guidelines reflecting contemporary clinical practice in the management of Buruli ulcer (Mycobacterium ulcerans infection) in Australia were published in 2007. • Management has continued to evolve, as new evidence has become available from randomised trials, case series and increasing clinical experience with oral antibiotic therapy. • Therefore, guidelines on the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of Buruli ulcer in Australia have been updated. They include guidance on the new role of antibiotics as first-line therapy; the shortened duration of antibiotic treatment and the use of all-oral antibiotic regimens; the continued importance, timing and role of surgery; the recognition and management of paradoxical reactions during antibiotic treatment; and updates on the prevention of disease.
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