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Syphilis
is a sexually transmitted disease caused by primary infection by the spirochete
Treponema pallidum. It is still a common sexually transmitted disease
in many areas of the world despite the availability of effective treatments
and widespread public education programs regarding safe sexual practices.
Pathogenic treponemes are rapidly destroyed by heat, cold, and drying,
and so they are usually spread by direct contact. Sexual transmission
is the usual mode of infection, and this occurs through skin lesions or
mucous membranes coming in contact with an open lesion. Transmission can
also occur through parenteral exposure through contaminated needles or
blood, but this is rare. Serological screening and the use of stored blood
components has virtually eliminated the possibility of transfusion-associated
syphilis.
The disease progresses through several stages if left untreated. The first
stage, or primary stage, is characterized by the appearance of a lesion
called a chancre which develops between 10 and 90 days following
the initial infection. The chancre is a painless, solitary lesion with
raised, well-defined borders, and is an endothelial thickening composed
of an aggregate of lymphocytes, plasma cells and macrophages. These usually
occur on the external genitalia, but in women, may also occur in the vagina
or cervix. The chancre may last for 1 to 6 weeks, after which it heals
spontaneously.
If syphilis is not diagnosed during the primary stage, 25% of cases progress
to the secondary stage, in which systemic dissemination of the organism
occurs. The secondary stage occurs about 1 to 2 months after the disappearance
of the chancre, but in some cases, the primary lesion may still be present.
Symptoms of the secondary stage include generalized lymphadenopathy, malaise,
fever, pharyngitis, and a rash on the skin and mucous membranes.
The secondary stage may last from 1 week up to 8 weeks, and spontaneous
healing occurs as in the primary stage. The latent stage follows the disappearance
of the secondary stage, and is characterized by a complete lack of symptoms.
Patients are noninfectious during the latent stage, with the exception
of pregnant women who can pass the disease onto the fetus.
Approximately 33% of untreated patients develop the tertiary stage. This
stage can occur anytime after the secondary stage, from months to years;
typically, the tertiary stage occurs between 10 and 30 years after resolution
of the secondary stage. Tertiary syphilis has three main clinical manifestations:
gummatous syphilis, cardiovascular disease and neurosyphilis.
Gummas are localized areas of granulomatous inflammation found mostly
on bones, skin or subcutaneous tissue, and represent the host response
to infection.
The lesions can reach up to 10cm in diameter and contain lymphocytes,
plasma cells and perivascular inflammation.
Cardiovascular disease associated with tertiary syphilis usually involves
the descending aorta and symptoms arise due to the destruction of elastic
tissue in the arterial walls. Aortic aneurysm, thickening of the valve
leaflets or narrowing of the ostia are all typical cardiovascular complications
of tertiary syphilis.
Neurosyphilis is the most common manifestation of tertiary syphilis, but
it can occur anytime after the primary stage, and can be present throughout
all stages of the disease. If it occurs during the first 2 years following
the initial infection, neurosyphilis usually takes the form of acute meningitis.
Later manifestations of neurosyphilis include destruction of the lower
spinal cord and chronic progressive dementia. These later manifestations
take at least 10 years to occur and are very rare due to early detection
and treatment of the disease with penicillin.
Congenital syphilis occurs when a woman who has early syphilis or early
latent syphilis transits treponemes to her fetus. The fetus is usually
affected during the second or third trimester of pregnancy and fetal or
perinatal death occurs in around 40% of cases. Affected liveborn infants
usually do not exhibit symptoms during the first few weeks of life. Symptoms
in 60 to 90 % of affected infants then develop thereafter, and include
a variety of manifestations: rhinitis; a typical skin rash that is prominent
around the mouth, the palms of the hands and soles of the feet; generalized
lymphadenopathy; hepatospenomegaly; jaundice; anemia;
painful limbs; bone abnormalities; and neurosyphilis.
Laboratory diagnosis of syphilis may be performed by the direct detection
of spirochetes, nontreponemal serological tests and treponemal serological
tests.
| Product |
Cat
# |
Description |
Specimen
material |
Method |
Size |
| Syphilis
IgG |
C-SPG-K16 |
Qualitative
detection of Anti- T.pallidum
IgG antibodies |
Serum
and Plasma |
CLIA |
96
tests |
| Syphilis
IgM |
C-SPM-K17 |
Qualitative
detection of Anti-T.pallidum
IgM antibodies |
Serum
and Plasma |
CLIA |
96
tests |
Sample
Volume : 10 µl
Controls/ Calibrators : 3 controls
Incubation : 20+ 20
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