Syphilis
Syphilis
Syphilis
CAI TAO
Requirements
Supposed to Master:
The etiology and pathogenesis,
The transmission,
The classification and stages,
The clinical manifestations,
The Laboratory examination
the diagnosis, treatment of syphilis
Definition of sexually
transmitted diseases (STDs)
Late stage:
Tertiary stage
Late latent syphilis
Congenital syphilis
Clinical manifestation
Primary syphilis----
chancre
incubation period: 2~4w.
occurs on the penis or
scrotum of 70% of men
with syphilis and on the
vulva, cervix, or
perineum of more than
50% of women with
syphilis.
Clinical manifestation
Extragenital chancres
occur most commonly
above the neck, typically
affecting the lips or oral
cavity.
The primary lesion
usually is a single
ulcerated lesion with a
surrounding red areola.
The edge and base of
the ulcer have a
cartilaginous (buttonlike)
consistency on palpation.
Clinical manifestation
Secondary syphilis
The manifestations of
the secondary stage
are extremely variable
and usually include
localized or diffuse
s y m m e t r i c
mucocutaneous
lesions.
Clinical manifestation
Condyloma latum :
In 10% of patients,
highly infectious
papules develop at
the mucocutaneous
junctions and, in
moist intertriginous
skin, become
hypertrophic and
dull pink or gray.
Less common findings include
periostitis, arthralgias, meningitis,
nephritis, hepatitis, and ulcerative
colitis
Clinical manifestation
Tertiary syphilis
Gummatous syphilis
Cardiovascular syphilis
Neurosyphilis
Clinical manifestation
Congenital syphilis
Early manifestations
Early signs and symptoms include development of
a diffuse rash, characterized by extensive
sloughing of the epithelium, particularly on the
palms, soles, and skin around the mouth and anus.
A compilation of early clinical presentations of
congenital syphilis included abnormal bone
radiographs, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly,
petechiae, other skin rashes, anemia,
lymphadenopathy, jaundice, pseudoparalysis, and
snuffles.
A classic mucocutaneous sign is depressed linear
scars radiating from the orifice of the mouth and
termed rhagades (Parrot lines).
Clinical manifestation
Late manifestations
Late signs and symptoms are rare and, if
encountered, usually involve complications
including interstitial keratitis, cranial nerve
VIII deafness, corneal opacities, and/or
recurrent arthropathy.
Dental abnormalities may be evident, such
as centrally notched and widely spaced,
p e g - shaped, upper central in cis o rs
(Hutchinson teeth) and sixth-year molars
with multiple poorly developed cusps
(mulberry molars).
Clinical manifestation
Latent syphilis
In latent syphilis, there are no clinical
signs or symptioms of the disease, and it
presence is detectable only by serologic
testing.
Laboratory examination
Darkfield examination
Da rkfield microscopy is ess e n tia l in
evaluating moist cutaneous lesions, such as
the chancre of primary syphilis or the
condyloma lata of secondary syphilis.
When dark-field microscopy is not available,
direct immunofluorescence staining of fixed
smears (direct fluorescent antibody
Treponema pallidum [DFA-TP]) is an option.
Both procedures detect the causative
organism at a rate of approximately 85-92%.
Serologic tests
Nontreponemal tests
Measure nonspecific antibodies (reagins)
Employ cardiolipin antigen
Screening and diagnostic tests
Response to therapy
RPR, VDRL, TRUST
Treponemal tests
Specific antibodies
confirmatory tests
FTA-ABS, TPHA,MHA-TP, TPI
Diagnosis
Genital Ulcer Evaluation
Diagnosis based on medical history and
physical examination often inaccurate
Serologic test for syphilis
Culture/antigen test for herpes simplex
Haemophilus ducreyi culture in settings
where chancroid is prevalent
Biopsy may be useful
Diagnosis
Disease history
Clinical manifestation
Laboratory data
Primary syphilis: chancre + darkfield
examination
Secondary syphilis: skin lesions +
serological tests
treatment
Penicillin remains the mainstay of treatment.
Penicillin use is the only therapy used
widely for neurosyphilis, congenital syphilis,
or syphilis during pregnancy. Rarely, T
pallidum has been found to persist following
adequate penicillin therapy; at the same
time, there is no indication that the
organism has acquired resistance to
p e n i c i l l i n .
treatment
Recommended regimen
Benzathine penicillin G 2.4 million units IM
at one week intervals x 3 doses
Penicillin allergy
Doxycycline 100 mg orally twice daily
or
Tetracycline 500 mg orally four times daily
Duration of therapy 28 days; close clinical and
serologic follow-up; data to support alternatives
to pcn are limited
Follow-Up
Treatment failure can occur with any regimen.
However, assessing response to treatment
often is difficult, and definitive criteria for cure
or failure have not been established.
Nontreponemal test titers may decline more
slowly for patients who previously had
syphilis. Patients should be reexamined
clinically and serologically at 3 month
intervals in the first year and then at 6 month
intervals tor 2 to 3 years after treatment.
Patients who have signs or symptoms
that persist or recur or who have a
sustained fourfold increase in
nontreponemal test titer (i.e., compared
with the maximum or baseline titer at
the time of treatment) probably failed
treatment or were reinfected. These
patients should be re-treated.
Reivew
What is the cause of syphilis?
How do syphilis occur?
How do syphilis transmit?
What is chancre?
What is condyloma lata?
What laboratory examinations are there
of syphilis?
How should primary syphilis be treated?
Case 1
few weeks prior to the eruption. Other than the skin rash
his physical examination was normal. Screening for
sexually transmitted diseases revealed positive .Venereal
Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL)and rapid plasma
reagin(RPR) tests.