syphilis, pathophysiology of syphilis, symptoms of syphilis, mode of transmission of syphilis, complications of syphilis, stages of syphilis, diagnosis of syphilis, pathology of syphilis, syphilis symptoms, syphilis diagnosis, cause of syphilis
Stages, Symptoms, Diagnosis and Complications of Syphilis
1. By
Mr. K. K. Zambare
HOD, Pharmacology
SBSPM B. Pharmacy College, Ambajogai
Prof. K. K. Zambare
2. Definition
Syphilis is sexually transmitted disease caused due to
Treponema pallidum.
T. pallidim is spirochete bacterium
Prof. K. K. Zambare
3. Mode of transmission
Direct contact with infected patient
Sexual transmission
Vertical trasmission: From infected mother to foetus
Blood transfussion
Prof. K. K. Zambare
4. Stages
Prof. K. K. Zambare
Primary
• Appears after 3 to 4 weeks after the infection
• Lesions on genitals, in mouth, rectum
Secondary
• Sores in throat, Lesion or rash anywhere on body
• Show symptoms likeWeight loss, fever, swollen lymph nodes
Latent
• It is hidden stage. Person is carrier of infection
• Does not show any symptom. Stage may last for year
Tertiary
• Life threatening stage. The bacteria spreads to various organs
• May lead to meningitis, heart disease, memory loss, Blindness
5. Symptoms
Symptoms vary as per the stage of disease but generally shows
following signs,
Skin rash
Fever
Fatigue
Headache
Weight loss
Lesions in mouth,
Vagina, anus, penis
Dementia
Blindness
Neurosyphilis
Dementia
Prof. K. K. Zambare
6. Diagnosis
Physical examination: Physician may check
symptoms of disease physically.
Microscopic test: Lymph from lesion is collected and
observed under microscope.
Serological test:
Radiological examination
Prof. K. K. Zambare
7. Complications
Dementia: Memory may be lost in severe cases
Cardiovascular diseases: Valvular defects, cardiac
infection
Neurological problems: The bacteria may infect the
meninges and leads to meningitis, also cause stroke,
blindness
Gastric syphilis: This may lead to anorexia, nausea,
vomiting, weight loss
Pregnancy Problems: Syphilis leads to miscarriage,
stillbirth
Prof. K. K. Zambare