Syphilis - Still A Curse
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By now you have known that syphilis is an STD that can generally be transmitted through sexual contact. It is a communicable disease,
development of which is sure but may appear in an irregular manner. It is generally transmitted through direct
contact of the infected genitals, and rarely by other means. It can damage any tissue or organ.
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Primary syphilis is the stage where the Treponema Palladium spirochete enters the body which begins at the where
the infectious sore directly touched; sometimes it does not show any remarkable symptom. Reviewing the medical
history of the patient will reveal that the contact with an infected person happened 1-8 weeks before. The normal
lesion is characterized by a chancre, a firm painless wound, and the spot of the first exposure, most frequently,
the penis, the labia or the uterine cervix.
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The development period takes about 21 days on the average and depends on varying factors. The lesion starts with
minor corrosion, which immediately develops into a skin level, painless wound. It normally comes with enlargement
of the isolated, mobile and painless ganglions in some areas.
Secondary syphilis is the period where the infection starts to spread, appearing after 7-10 weeks from first
exposure and 2-3 weeks after the primary infection, wherein the microbes migrate from the ganglions in great
numbers. There will be a resulting second incubation until skin ulcerations come out within 45 days from appearance
of first signs and 60-70 days from first contact with infection.
The infection will sometimes cause fever. Any part of the body tissue can be affected and injured. In general,
the lesions will develop in the teguments and mucous membranes. The lesions will appear like rashes caused by a
viral disease, however lesions will be pustule-like elements.
Syphilis will occur recurrently if not diagnosed and treated correctly. This is when the infection will progress
to the next stage, the secondary syphilis, 3 to 9 months after treatment. Relapses can be happening in the blood
without any developing any outward symptoms. If manifestations appear, lesions will appear in the skin and mucous
membranes. There will also be neurological and visceral symptoms, sore eyes; bones will be affected.
In latent syphilis, infection has been diagnosed in the blood but present no clinical manifestations. It
is the period between secondary resumption and progress towards the tertiary stage.
At this stage, proof of infection has been clearly diagnosed from the blood tests; the LCR exam is negative;
radiological exams and ECG will reveal cardiovascular damage.
The third stage of the infection or tertiary syphilis can emerge even after years of latency. At the late
latency stage, lesions might appear perhaps as an allergic reaction of the tissue to Treponema Palladium, affecting
tissues of the skin and the mucous membranes. Small lesions can develop and become nodules. The mucous membranes
can also develop tubercles and lesions.
An infected mother can pass on the infection to her baby through the fetus placenta flow, thus the baby will be
born with congenital syphilis. The father cannot transmit it to the baby if the mother is not infected.
Precocious congenital syphilis is the type with which the child is born or it occurs during the first two years
of life. It is characterized by blister like signs, sometimes ulcerous.
Late congenital syphilis occurs after the age of two and the lesions are associated to the third stage of
disease.
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