Syphilis 
by: Erik Austin, D.O., M.P.H.
Syphilis 
    * AKA lues
    * Contagious, sexually transmitted disease caused by the
    * Spirochete: Treponema pallidum
    * Enters through skin or mucous membrane where primary manifestations are seen
Treponema pallidum 
    * Spiral spirochete that is mobile
    * # of spirals varies from 4 to 14
    * Length is 5 to 20 microns
    * Can be seen on fresh primary or secondary lesions by darkfield microscopy or fluorescent antibody techniques
Syphilis epidemiology 
    * Major health problem throughout world
    * 2.6 cases per 100,000 in 1999 in the US
    * Lowest level ever recorded
    * Concentrated in 28 counties in the SE U.S.
    * Mainly gay men and crack cocaine users
    * Enhances risk of transmission of HIV
    * HIV testing recommended in all patients with syphilis
    * Reportable disease
Serologic Tests 
    * Testing reveals patients immune status not whether they are currently infected
    * Non-treponemal antigen test uses lipoidal antigens rather than T. pallidum or components of it
    * RPR = rapid plasma reagin
    * VDRL = Venereal Disease Research Laboratory 
    * Positive within 5 to 6 weeks after infection
    * Strongly positive in secondary phase
    * Strength of reaction is stated in dilutions
    * May become negative with treatment or over decades
    * MHA-TP:  microhemagglutination assay for T. pallidum
    * FTA-ABS:  fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption test
    * All positive nontreponemal test results should be confirmed with a specific treponemal test
    * Treponemal tests become positive early, useful in confirming primary syphilis
    * Remain positive for life, useful in diagnosing late disease
    * Treatment results in loss of positivity in 13-24% of patients
Biologic False-Positive Test Results  
    * Positive test with no history or clinical evidence of syphilis
    * Acute BFP:  those that revert to negative in less than 6 months
    * Chronic BFP:  those that persist > 6 months
BFP Test Results in Syphilis 
    * Acute BFP
    * Vaccinations
    * Infections
    * pregnancy
    * Chronic BFP
    * Connective tissue disease (SLE)
    * Liver disease
    * Blood transfusions
    * IVDA
Cutaneous Syphilis 
    * Chancre is usually the first cutaneous lesion   
    * 18 to 21 days after infection
    * Round indurated papule with an eroded surface that exudes a serous fluid
    * Usually painless and heals without scarring
Chancre 
    * Inguinal adenopathy 1-2 weeks after chancre
    * Generally occur singly, but may be multiple
    * Diameter mm to cm
Chancres 
    * In women, the genital chancre is less often observed due to location within the vagina and cervix
    * Edema of labia may occur
    * Untreated, the chancre heals spontaneously in 1 to 4 months
    * Constitutional symptoms begin just as chancres disappear
    * Extragenital chancre: may be larger, frequently on lips, rarely tongue, tonsil, breast, finger, anus.  
Chancre Histology 
    * Ulcer covered by neutrophils and fibrin
    * Dense infiltrate of lymphocytes and and plasma cells
    * Spirochetes seen with with silver stains; Warthin-Starry
    * Direct fluorescent antibody tissue test (DFAT-TP) = serous exudate collected on a slide sent for exam
Serology 
    * Nontreponemal tests positive 50%
    * Treponemal tests positive 90%
    * Positivity depends upon duration of infection, if chancre has been present for several weeks, test is usually positive
Chancre vs. Chancroid 
    * Incubation 3 weeks
    * Painless
    * Hard
    * Lymphadenopathy  may be bilateral, nontender, nonsuppurative
    * Incubation 4-7 days
    * Painful
    * Soft
    * Lymphadenopathy unilateral, tender, suppurative
DDx in Syphilis 
    * Chancroid - multiple lesions, may coexist with chancre, must r/o syphilis
    * Granuloma Inguinale - indurated nodule that erodes, soft red granulation tissue, Donovan bodies in macrophages with Wright or Giemsa stain
    * Lymphogranuloma Venereum - small, painless, superficial non indurated ulcer, primary lesions followed in 7 to 30 days by adenopathy
    * HSV - grouped vesicles, burning pain
Secondary Syphilis 
    * Skin manifestations in 80% called syphilids
    * Symmetric, generalized, superficial, macular - later papular, pustular
    * May affect face, shoulders, flanks, palms and soles, anal or genital areas 
Secondary Syphilis            Macular Eruptions 
    * Exanthematic erythema 6-8 weeks after chancre - may last hours to months
    * Round, slightly scaly ham-colored macules
    * Pain and pruritus may be present
    * Generalized adenopathy
Secondary Syphilis     Papular Eruptions 
    * Occurs on face and flexures of arms, legs, and trunk
    * Yellowish-red spots may appear on palmar and plantar surfaces
    * Ollendorf’s sign = tender papule   
    * May produce a psoriasiform eruption
    * May appear as minute scale-capped papules
    * Tend to be disseminated, but may be localized, asymmetrical, configurate, hypertrophic or confluent.
     * Annular syphilid - mimics sarcoidosis and is more common in blacks
    * Pustular syphilid – rare - face, trunk, extremities red small crust-covered ulceration
    * Rupial syphilid - superficial ulceration is covered with a pile of terraced crusts resembling an oyster shell.  
    * Lues Maligna - rare, severe ulcerations, pustules, or rupioid lesions, accompanied by severe constitutional symptoms.
    * Condylomata lata - papular mass, weeping, gray 1-3cm, groin, anus (not vegetative like condylomata acuminata)
    * Syphilitic alopecia - irregular, scalp has a moth-eaten appearance 5% of pts 
Secondary Syphilis Mucous Membrane 
     * Present in 1/3 of secondary syphilis
    * Most common is “syphilitic sore throat”
    * Diffuse pharyngitis, hoarseness
    * Tongue may show patches of desquamation of papillae
    * Ulcerations of tongue and lips in late stages
    * Mucous patches are the most characteristic mucous membrane lesions; macerated, flat. Grayish, rounded erosions covered by a delicate, soggy membrane.
Secondary Syphilis Systemic Involvement 
    * Lymphadenopathy common.
    * Acute glomerulonephritis, gastritis, proctitis, hepatitis, meningitis, iritis, uveitis, optic neuritis, Bell’s palsy, pulmonary nodular infiltrates, osteomyelitis, polyarthritis.
Secondary Syphilis Diagnosis 
    * Nontreponemal serologic tests for syphilis are strongly reactive (seronegativity rarely in AIDS)
    * Spirochetes on darkfield exam
Secondary Syphilis DDx “Great Imitator” 
    * Pityriasis rosea
    * Drug eruptions (pruritic)
    * Lichen planus; Wickham’s striae, Koebner’s, pruritic
    * Psoriasis; no adenopathy
    * Sarcoidosis; need serology and silver staining of biopsy
    * Infectious mononucleosis, false pos RPR
    * Geographic tongue
    * Aphthous stomatitis
Latent Syphilis 
    * After the lesions of secondary syphilis have involuted, a latent period occurs where the patient has no clinical signs, but positive serological tests
    * May last a few months or a lifetime
    * 60-70% of pts that are untreated remain asymptomatic for life
    * Women may infect unborn child for 2 years
Late Syphilis 
    * Defined by CDC as infection of greater than 1 years duration
    * Tertiary Cutaneous Syphilis
    * Late Osseous Syphilis
    * Neurosyphilis
    * Late Cardiovascular Syphilis
Tertiary Cutaneous Syphilis 
    * Tertiary syphilids usually occur 3-5 years after infection
    * 16% of untreated pts will develop lesions of skin, mucous membrane, bone or joints
    * Skin lesions are localized, destructive, heal with scarring
Tertiary Syphilids 
    * Two main types; Nodular syphilid and the Gumma
    * Nodular - reddish brown firm papules or nodules 2mm or larger, scales.
    * Gumma - larger
Nodular Tertiary Syphilid 
    * Lesions tend to form rings and undergo involution as new lesions develop
    * Characteristic circular or serpiginous pattern
    * “kidney-shaped” lesion occurs on the extensor surfaces of the arms and on back
    * Patches have scars and fresh ulcerated lesions
    * Process may last for years, slowly marching across large areas of skin  
Gumma 
    * May occur as unilateral, isolated, single or disseminated lesions, or serpiginous
    * May be restricted to the skin, or originate in deeper tissues, and break down the skin
    * Lesions begin as small nodules, enlarge to several centimeters
    * Central necrosis, deep ulcer with a gummy base, most frequent site is lower legs
Diagnosis of Tertiary Syphilis 
    * Histopathology - tuberculoid granules with multinucleated giant cells
    * Nontreponemal tests (VDRL, RPR) positive in 75%
    * Treponemal tests (FTA-ABS, MHA-TP, TPI) positive in nearly 100%
    * Darkfield negative, PCR may be positive
DDx Tertiary Syphilis 
    * R/O tumors; SCCA tongue, leukemic infiltrates, sarcoidosis
    * Ulcerated syphilids resemble scrofula, atypical mycobacterium, sporotrichosis, blastomycosis
    * Mycosis fungoides (CTCL) has eczema and pruritus
    * Perforation of hard palate and septum
Late Osseous Syphilis 
    * Gummatous lesions can involve the periosteum and bone
    * Head, face, tibia
    * Periostitis, osteomyelitis, osteitis, gummatous osteoarthritis
    * “Osteocope” - bone pain often at night
    * Charcot joint - loss of contours of joint, hypermobility, painless
    * Associated with tabes dorsalis
Neurosyphilis 
    * CNS involvement with syphilis can occur at any stage
    * Most are asymptomatic; CSF shows pleocytosis
    * 4-10% of untreated pts will develop neurosyphilis
Early Neurosyphilis 
    * First year of infection - meningeal
    * Headache, stiff neck, cranial nerve disorders, seizures, delirium, increased ICP
Meningovascular Neurosyphilis 
    * 4-7 years after infection
    * Thrombosis of vessels in the CNS
    * Hemiplegia, aphasia, hemianopsia, transverse myelitis, progressive muscular atrophy
    * CN palsies; CN IIX, III, IV, VI
    * “Argyll Robertson Pupil”  accommodates, but doesn’t react 
Late Neurosyphilis 
    * Parenchymatous neurosyphilis occurs more than 10 years after infection
    * Two classical patterns; Tabes Dorsalis, and General Paresis
Tabes Dorsalis 
    * Degeneration  of the dorsal roots of the spinal nerves and posterior columns of the the spinal cord
    * Gastric crisis with severe pain and vomiting is most common
    * Pain, urination problems, paresthesias, ataxia, diplopia, vertigo, deafness
    * Signs:  Argyll Robertson pupil, reduced lower cord reflexes, Romberg sign, sensory loss, atonic bladder, Charcot’s joints, optic atrophy
    * Personality changes, memory loss, apathy, megalomania, delusions, dementia
Late Cardiovascular Syphilis 
    * Occurs in 10% of untreated pts
    * Aortitis, aortic insufficiency, coronary disease, aortic aneurysm
Congenital Syphilis 
    * Prenatal syphilis acquired in utero
    * Infection through the placenta usually does not occur before the fourth month, so treatment of the mother before this time will almost always prevent infection in the fetus.
    * If infection occurs after the fourth month 40% risk of fetal death
    * 40% of pregnancies in women with untreated early syphilis will result in a syphilitic infant.
    * Most neonates with congenital syphilis are normal at birth.
    * Early congenital syphilis - lesions occurring within first two years of life
    * Late congenital syphilis - lesion occur after two years
Early Congenital Syphilis 
    * Cutaneous manifestations appear most commonly during 3rd week
    * Snuffles (a form of Rhinitis) is most frequent, bloody drainage, ulcers may develop, later septal perfs 
    * 30-60% of infants develop cutaneous lesions similar to secondary syphilis
    * Red to copper maculopapular, become large, scaling, pustules, crusting
    * Face, arms, buttocks, legs, palms and soles
Early Congenital Syphilis  
    * Face, perineum, and intertriginous areas, usually fissured lesions resembling mucous patches.  Radial scarring results leading to Rhagades
    * Bone lesions occur in 70-80% , epiphysitis is common and causes pain on motion, leading to infant refusing to move; Parrot’s pseudoparalysis.
    * Radiologic features of the bone lesions in congenital syphilis during the first 6 months are characteristic.
    * Bone lesions occur at the epiphyseal ends of long bones.
    * Lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, nephrotic syndrome, meningitis, nerve palsies may all occur
Late Congenital Syphilis 
    * Lesions are two types - malformations of tissue affected at critical growth periods (Stigmata) and persistent inflammatory foci
    * Inflammatory - lesions of the cornea, bones, and central nervous system, i.e., interstitial keratitis in 20-50%, perisynovitis of knees (Clutton’s joints), tabes dorsalis, seizures, and paresis
Late Congenital Syphilis 
    * Malformations (Stigmata) - destructive effects leave scars or developmental defects
    * Hutchinson’s Triad - Changes in incisors, corneal scars, and eighth nerve deafness
    * Also, saber shins, rhagades of the lips, saddle nose, mulberry molars
Hutchinson’s Teeth  
    * Malformation of the central upper incisors that appears in the second or permanent teeth.  Teeth are cylindrical rather than flattened, cutting edge narrower than base, notch may develop
    * Mulberry molar - first molar hyperplastic, flat occlusal surface covered with knobs representing abortive cusps
Treatment of Syphilis 
    * PCN is drug of choice for treatment of all stages of syphilis.
    * HIV testing is recommended in all patients
    * If less than one year;  2.4M U of Benzathine PCN G
    * PCN-allergic;  Tetracycline 500mg QID for 14 days
Jarisch- Herxheimer Reaction 
    * Febrile reaction occurs after the initial dose of antisyphilitic tx, 60-90% of pts
    * 6-8 hours after dose - chills, fever, myalgia, increase in inflammation (neurosyphilis) 
Treatment of Sex Partners 
    * Persons exposed to a patient with early syphilis within the previous 3 months should be treated, even if seronegative
    * Single dose azithromycin effective in treating incubating syphilis
Serologic Testing after Tx 
    * VDRL or RPR repeated every 3 months in first year, every 6 months in second year, than annually
    * A fourfold decrease in titer should be seen at 6 months, if not then 3 weekly PCN IM injections
    * Response for latent syphilis is slower, 12-24 months
    * If not responding; HIV and CSF testing repeated
    * Pts with late syphilis may be “serofast”, and titers may not improve
    * Neurosyphilis pts should have CSF every 6 months
Syphilis and HIV 
    * Most HIV pts exhibit the classic clinical manifestations and course, and respond similarly to tx
    * More likely to present with secondary syphilis and have a persistent chancre
Yaws 
    * Treponema pallidum subsp. Pertenue
    * Endemic in some tropical, rural regions
    * Overcrowding, poor hygiene, transmitted by contact with infected lesions
    * Children, disabling course, affects skin, bones, and joints
Early Yaws 
    * Primary papule or group of papules appear at site of inoculation after 3 week incubation period, initial lesion becomes larger and crusted (Mother Yaw, maman pian )
    * Feet, legs, buttocks, face, not genitals
    * Mother yaw disappears after a few months 
    * Secondary Yaws – appears weeks or months after mother yaw appears.  May be smaller and appear around primary lesion; may be annular (ringworm yaws)
    * Condylomata may develop around body orifices and creases
    * Palms and soles may form hyperkeratotic plaques leading to a painful crab-like gait (crab yaws)
Late Yaws 
    * 10% progress to late stage where gummas occur
    * Ulcer with clean edges that tend to fuse to form con figurate and serpiginous patterns similar to tertiary syphilis
    * Bone, joint, saddle nose, saber shin, Gangosa (destruction of palate and nose)
    * Diagnosis = Darkfield, VDRL or RPR
Endemic Syphilis (Bejel) 
    * Bejel is a Bedouin term for nonvenereal treponematosis, nomadic tribes of North Africa, Southwest Asia, Eastern Mediterranean
    * T. pallidum subsp. Endemicum
    * Usually occurs in childhood through skin contact
    * May affect the skin, oral mucosa, and skeletal system
Bejel 
    * Primary lesions rare, probably go undetected in the oral mucosa
    * Secondary oral lesions - shallow, painless ulcers, laryngitis
    * Condyloma of axillae and groin, lymphadenopathy, osteoperiostitis causes night leg pain
    * Untreated secondary bejel heals in 6-9 months
    * Tertiary stage - gummatous ulcerations of the skin, nasopharynx, and bone.
    * Neuro - uveitis, choritis, optic atrophy
Pinta 
    * T. carateum; nonvenereal, endemic
    * Only skin lesions occur
    * All ages, Brazilian rain forest
    * Primary Stage - 7 to 60 days after inoculation.  Lesion begins as a tiny red papules and become an elevated erythematous infiltrated plaque 10cm in diameter over 2-3 months.  Legs -satellite lesions, no erosion or ulceration as in chancres.
    * Secondary Stage - 5 months to 1 year
    * Small, scaling papules that enlarge and coalesce – affects extremities and face
    * Red to blue, black with postinflammatory hyperpigmentation
    * Nontreponemal tests reactive in 60%
    * Late Dyschromic Stage - young adults – may appear as hyperpigmented and depigmented macules resembling vitiligo
    * Face, waist, wrist, trochanteric areas
    * Histo - acanthosis, lichenoid, spirochetes in epidermis
Treatment of Yaws, Bejel, and Pinta 
    * Benzathine PCN G 1.2 to 2.4 M units IM
    * Tetracycline 500mg QID for adults
    * EES 10mg/kg children QID for 14 days
Nonvenereal Treponematoses 
    * Yaws
    * Endemic Syphilis
    * Pinta
Treatment 
    * Syphilis >1year;  2.4M PCN G weekly for 3 weeks  Pcn-allergic;  Tetra 500mg QID for 30 days
    * Neurosyphilis; IV
    * Infant 100,000 to 150,000 units/kg/day Procaine PCN BID for first seven days of life
Syphilis.ppt
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