Abstract
Syphilis is caused by infection with Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum, a not-yet-cultivable spiral-shaped bacterium that is usually transmitted by sexual contact with an infected partner or by an infected pregnant woman to her fetus. There is no vaccine to prevent syphilis. Diagnosis and treatment of infected individuals and their contacts is key to syphilis control programs that also include sex education and promotion of condom use to prevent infection. Untreated syphilis can progress through four stages: primary (chancre, regional lymphadenopathy), secondary (disseminated skin eruptions, generalized lymphadenopathy), latent (decreased re-occurrence of secondary stage manifestations, absence of symptoms), and tertiary (gummas, cardiovascular syphilis and late neurological symptoms). The primary and secondary stages are the most infectious. WHO estimates that each year 11 million new cases of syphilis occur globally among adults aged 15-49 years. Syphilis has re-emerged in several regions including North America, Western Europe, China and Australia. Host-associated factors that drive the re-emergence and spread of syphilis include high-risk sexual activity, migration and travel, and economic and social changes that limit access to health care. Early, uncomplicated syphilis is curable with a single intramuscular injection of benzathine penicillin G (BPG), the first line drug for all stages of syphilis. Emergence of macrolide-resistant T. pallidum has essentially precluded the empirical use of azithromycin as a second-line drug for treatment of syphilis. Virulence attributes of T. pallidum are poorly understood. Genomic and proteomic studies have provided some new information concerning how this spirochete may evade host defense mechanisms to persist for long periods in the host.
Highlights
Syphilis is one of seven curable, sexually transmitted infections (STIs) that is caused by a bacterial pathogen
T. pallidum can be transmitted via the bloodstream of an infected pregnant woman to her developing fetus at any time during pregnancy, the risk of fetal infection is much higher during untreated, early maternal syphilis than during late stage maternal syphilis
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS OF SYPHILIS Because T. pallidum cannot be cultivated in vitro, laboratory-based diagnosis of syphilis is usually dependent upon visualization of the spirochete in clinical specimens by dark-field microscopy, which may not be available in lowincome countries, and/or reactivity of patient serum or plasma in serological tests [12, 17, 26, 30]
Summary
Syphilis is one of seven curable, sexually transmitted infections (STIs) that is caused by a bacterial pathogen. T. pallidum can be transmitted via the bloodstream of an infected pregnant woman to her developing fetus at any time during pregnancy, the risk of fetal infection is much higher during untreated, early maternal syphilis than during late stage maternal syphilis.
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