Syphilis

What Is Syphilis?

Syphilis is a highly contagious disease that’s mostly spread through sexual activity, including oral and anal sex. The infected person often doesn’t know that they have the disease and passes it on to their sexual partner.

Syphilis was once a major public health threat. It can cause serious long- term problems such as arthritis, brain damage, and blindness. There wasn’t an effective treatment until the late 1940s, when the antibiotic penicillin was developed.

According to the CDC, the rate of new cases of syphilis plummeted in the 1990s. In 2000, it reached an all-time low since reporting began in 1941. But the disease has been on the increase ever since. The rate of syphilis in the United States increased 71% from 2014 to 2018.

Syphilis Causes

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Syphilis is caused by the bacteriaTreponema pallidum. You get it through direct contact with a syphilis sore on someone else’s body. This usually happens during sexual activity, but the bacteria can also get into your body through cuts on your skin or through your mucous membranes.

Syphilis can’t be spread by toilet seats, doorknobs, swimming pools, hot tubs, bathtubs, shared clothing, or eating utensils.

Syphilis Risk Factors

You’re at higher risk of getting syphilis if you:

Have unprotected sex

Have multiple sex partners

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Have HIV

Are a man who has sex with men

Syphilis Symptoms

Syphilis infection has three stages:

Early or primary syphilis. People with primary syphilis get one or more sores called chancres. They’re usually small, painless ulcers. They happen on your genitals, on your anus or rectum, or in or around your mouth between 10 and 90 days (3 weeks on average) after you’re exposed to the disease. Even if you don’t treat them, they heal without a scar within 6 weeks. But treatment will keep your disease from moving to the next stage.

Secondary syphilis. This stage begins 6 weeks to 6 months after you’re exposed. It may last 1 to 3 months. People with secondary syphilis usually get a rosy "copper penny" rash on the palms of their hands and soles of their feet. They may also have different rashes on other parts of their body. These may look like rashes caused by other diseases. People may have moist, wart-like lesions in their groin, white patches on the inside of their mouth, swollen lymph glands, fever, hair loss, and weight loss. As with primary syphilis, symptoms of secondary syphilis will get better without treatment.

Syphilis Complications

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If you don’t get treatment, syphilis can have complications all over your body:

Small bumps. Bumps called gummas can grow on your skin, bones, or organs. They can destroy the tissue around them.

Nervous system problems.Syphilis can cause problems like headaches, meningitis, brain damage, paralysis, or hearing and vision loss.

Cardiovascular problems. The disease can damage your heart valves or cause bulging blood vessels (aneurysms) or an inflamed aorta (aortitis).

HIV. Syphilis can increase your chance of getting HIV.

Syphilis and Pregnancy

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The CDC says women should be tested for syphilis at least once during pregnancy. It’s best if they’re tested at their first prenatal visit. Depending on how long pregnant women have had syphilis, they have a high chance of stillbirth (birth of an infant who has died before delivery) or of giving birth to a baby who dies shortly after birth.

An infected baby may be born without symptoms but could have them within a few weeks if the disease isn’t treated right away. These signs and symptoms can be very serious. Untreated babies may have delays in their development, have seizures, or die.

Syphilis Diagnosis and Tests

Your doctor will need to do a physical exam. They might give you tests including:

  • Blood tests. A quick test at your doctor’s office or a public health clinic can diagnose syphilis.
  • Cerebrospinal fluid tests. If your doctor thinks you might have neurosyphilis, they’ll test fluid taken from around your spinal cord.
  • Darkfield microscopy. Syphilis bacteria are visible through a microscope in fluid taken from a skin sore or lymph node.

Syphilis Treatment

Syphilis is curable with quick diagnosis and treatment. But if it’s treated too late, it can permanently damage your heart and brain even after the infection is gone.

If you've had syphilis for less than a year, one dose of penicillin is usually enough to kill the infection. If you’re allergic to penicillin, you might get another antibiotic instead, like doxycycline. If you’re in a later stage of the disease, you’ll need more doses.

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If you’re pregnant and allergic to penicillin, your doctor will probably have you undergo a process called desensitization, which will let you take the drug safely.

Don’t have sexual contact until the infection is completely gone. Your sexual partners should also be tested and, if necessary, treated.

Some people with syphilis have an immune system reaction called a Jarisch- Herxheimer reaction several hours after their first treatment. This might include fever, chills, headache, upset stomach, rash, or joint and muscle pain. These problems usually go away within 24 hours.

Syphilis Prevention

You can get syphilis again after treatment kills the infection. To reduce your risk of syphilis infection:

Don’t have intimate contact with someone if you know they’re infected.

If you don’t know whether a sexual partner is infected, use a condom every time you have sex.

Read more on: sexual conditions