DESCRIPTION
- Sexually transmitted disease
- 12 million new cases diagnosed annually worldwide
- Acquired via mucous membranes/disrupted skin
- Divided into 3 stages:
- Primary syphilis:
- Painless chancre or ulcer
- Secondary syphilis:
- Replication and hematogenous spread
- Begins 3–6 wk after primary lesion
- Late latent secondary phase
- Tertiary or late syphilis:
- Very uncommon
- Cardiovascular and neurologic symptoms
ETIOLOGY
Treponema pallidum
:
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Primary (Early) Syphilis
- 21-day incubation period
- No constitutional symptoms
- Chancre:
- Painless papule at site of inoculation
- Clean-based, circular, sharply defined borders:
- Solitary lesions
- Commonly on penis, vulva, and rectum
- Bilateral regional lymphadenopathy
- Heals spontaneously in 3–6 wk
- Rectal chancre:
- Painful or painless
- Rectal irritation/discharge
- Painless enlargement of lymph nodes
Secondary (Early) Syphilis
- Occurs 3–6 wk after primary lesion
- Disseminated stage
- Rash (most common):
- Symmetric, diffuse, polymorphous, papular, or maculopapular rash
- Rash may be diverse and not fit a pattern
- Starts on trunk and flexor extremities
- Spreads to involve palms and soles:
- Discrete, red/reddish-brown
- 0.5–2 cm in diameter
- Condyloma lata:
- Large raised gray/white lesions, painless, moist
- Mucous membranes:
- Oral cavity and perineum
- Very contagious
- Intertriginous areas
- Flat rectal warts
- Systemic symptoms:
- Fever, headache, malaise, anorexia, sore throat, myalgias, and weight loss
- Diffuse lymphadenopathy:
- Palpable nodes at inguinal, axillary, posterior cervical, femoral, and/or epitrochlear regions
- Painless, firm, and rubbery
- Less common:
- “Moth-eaten” alopecia
- Syphilitic meningitis
- Scleritis
- Loss of lateral 3rd of eyebrows
- Painless mucosal lesions (mucous patches)
- Secondary stage resolves spontaneously in 1–2 mo
Latent Secondary Syphilis
- Begins after primary and secondary symptoms resolve.
- Period of no symptoms but positive serology:
- Late latent stage not infectious except for fetal transmission in pregnant women
- Persists for lifetime or develops into tertiary syphilis
Tertiary (Late) Syphilis
- Occurs in about 15% of patients with untreated latent secondary syphilis
- Can appear 10–20 yr after initial infection
- Neurologic and cardiovascular involvement:
- Destructive stages of disease
- Neurosyphilis (most common):
- Asymptomatic:
- Positive CSF – Venereal Disease Research Laboratories (VDRL)
- CSF pleocytosis (10–100 lymphocytes)
- Elevated CSF protein at 50–100 mg/dL
- Meningitis:
- Aseptic; CSF with positive VDRL, higher protein, and lower glucose (compared with above)
- Cranial nerve palsy, including isolated 8th nerve palsy
- General paresis:
- Loss of cortical function
- Argyll Robertson pupils (small fixed pupils that do not react to strong light, but do react to accommodative convergence)
- Tabes dorsalis (peripheral neuropathy)
- Degeneration of posterior columns/posterior or dorsal roots of spinal cord
- Dementia
- Paresthesias, abnormal gait, and lightning (sudden, severe) pain of extremities/trunk
- Progressive loss of reflexes, vibratory/position sensation
- Positive Romberg sign
- Vision: Optic atrophy
- Pupils: Argyll Robertson pupils
- Urinary incontinence
- Gummas:
- Late benign syphilis of cutaneous skin/viscera:
- Bone, brain, abdominal viscera, etc.
- Granulomatous, cellular hypersensitivity reaction:
- Round, irregular, or serpiginous shape
- “Great pox”
- Cardiovascular:
- Thoracic aortic aneurysm (ascending most common):
- Dilated aorta and aortic valve regurgitation
- Aortic valve insufficiency
- Coronary thrombosis
- Destructive lesions of skeletal structures or skin
- HIV-infected:
- Strong association with syphilis
- Increased incidence of neurosyphilis
Congenital Syphilis
- In utero infection:
- Age <2 yr:
- Hepatosplenomegaly, rash, condyloma lata, rhinitis (snuffles), jaundice (nonviral hepatitis), osteochondritis
- Older children (syphilis stigmata):
- Interstitial keratitis, nerve deafness, anterior bowing of shins, frontal bossing, mulberry molars, Hutchinson teeth, saddle nose, etc.
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Rapid plasma reagin (RPR)
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Serology:
- Nontreponemal test:
- RPR
- VDRL
- Positive 14 days after chancre appears
- Early false negatives, especially ≤7 days after primary chancre
- Repeat negative test in 2 wk and correlate with disease activity
- False positives in 1–2% of general population
- 4-fold change in titer clinically significant
- 100% sensitivity in secondary syphilis
- Nonreactive after successful treatment
- Treponemal antibody test:
- Fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption (FTA–ABS)
- Hemagglutination assay for antibody to
T. pallidum
(MHA–TP)
- More sensitive and specific
- 1% false-positive rate
- Confirmatory test
- Reactive for patient’s lifetime
- More costly and harder to perform
- Dark-field microscopy:
- Identifies treponemes from primary and secondary lesions
- Suspicious early lesions with negative serology (early primary syphilis)
- False negatives with ointments, creams
- Oral specimen unsuitable
- CSF analysis for tertiary neurosyphilis:
- Tertiary syphilis
- Positive VDRL/RPR
- Lymphocytes >5/mL
- Protein >45 mg/dL
- Decreased glucose
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Genital ulcer:
- Chancroid (painful)
- Genital herpes:
- Vesicular, multiple lesions
- Lymphogranuloma venereum
- Granuloma inguinale
- Superficial fungal infection
- Carcinoma
- Secondary and tertiary syphilis:
- Pityriasis rosea
- Drug-induced rash
- Acute febrile exanthems
- Psoriasis
- Lichen planus
- Scabies
- Infectious mononucleosis
- Viral illness
- Bacteremia
- Tertiary syphilis:
- Psychosis
- Dementia
- Multiple sclerosis
- Meningitis
- Encephalitis
- Delirium
- Unknown overdose
TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
Lower BP and establish IV access for aortic dissection.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Treatment other than penicillin with increased relapse rate:
- Desensitize those allergic to penicillin.
- Pregnancy:
- Treat with penicillin even in latent syphilis.
- If patient allergic to penicillin, admit for desensitization.
- Jarisch–Herxheimer reaction:
- Transient febrile reaction to therapy
- May be owing to antigen liberation from spirochetes or activation of complement cascade
- Peaks at 8 hr, resolves in 24 hr
- Symptoms:
- Fever, headache, malaise, worsening rash
- Treat with antipyretics
- No serious sequelae
- Recommended testing:
- Sexual partners
- Concomitant sexually transmitted diseases including HIV
- Repeat serology test in 6 and 12 mo.
MEDICATION
- Early primary, secondary, early latent (<1 yr):
- Benzathine penicillin G: 2.4 million U IM
- Doxycycline: 100 mg PO BID for 14 days
- Tetracycline: 500 mg PO QID for 14 days
- Late latent (>1 yr) except neurosyphilis:
- Benzathine penicillin G: 2.4 million U IM 3 times over 2 wk on days 0, 7, and 14
- Doxycycline: 100 mg PO BID for 4 wk
- Tetracycline: 500 mg PO QID for 4 wk
- Neurosyphilis:
- Penicillin G: 3–4 million U IV q4h for 10–14 days
- Procaine penicillin: 2.4 million U IM daily +
- Probenecid: 500 mg PO QID for 10–14 days
- Congenital syphilis:
- Penicillin G: 50,000 U/kg IM q8–12h for 10–14 days; or
- Procaine penicillin: 50,000 U/kg IM daily for 10–14 days
FOLLOW-UP