Depending on its type, leprosy may present different skin symptoms such as macules, plaques, papules and nodules. Tuberculoid leprosy may cause patchy plaques with neat, clear margins, asymmetrical lesions, and loss of sweat hair at the lesions. Borderline favored tuberculoid leprosy may cause reddish, purplish-red, tawny and partially well-defined plaques. Intermediate borderline leprosy may cause tan, red macules, plaques, and infiltrates, and the lesions may be serpentine or irregularly shaped. Boundary class paraneoplastic leprosy causes lesions that are mainly plaques, plaques, papules, nodules, and diffuse infiltrates. And the lesions are many in number, small in shape, and have unclear boundaries. Tumor type leprosy may cause multiple skin lesions, and symmetrically distributed, indistinctly bounded plaques, nodules, plaques, and diffuse infiltrates are more common.