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Health and medicine
Course: Health and medicine > Unit 13
Lesson 6: Sexually transmitted diseases- What are sexually transmitted infections?
- What is gonorrhea?
- Pathophysiology, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of gonorrhea
- What is chlamydia?
- Pathophysiology of chlamydia
- Diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of chlamydia
- What is syphilis?
- What is tertiary syphilis?
- What is congenital syphilis?
- Diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of syphilis
- What is chancroid?
- What is trichomoniasis?
- Pathophysiology of herpes
- What is neonatal herpes?
- Diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of herpes
- What are warts?
- What is bacterial vaginosis?
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What is syphilis?
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Want to join the conversation?
- Thank you for the informative video! My question is, Can syphilis untreated be fatal?(5 votes)
- Before there was the cure for syphilis it used to go to the brain and cause locomotor ataxia. In rare cases it did kill.(3 votes)
- So if the problem with a cure is identifying it - could we use a vaccine to do the same thing we did to smallpox, provided we could develop one?(2 votes)
- Yes, as long as syphilis do not mutate severely.(1 vote)
- Can syphillis be spread through kissing?(1 vote)
- Syphilis is a highly contagious disease spread primarily by sexual activity, including oral and anal sex. Occasionally, the disease can be passed to another person through prolonged kissing or close bodily contact. Although this disease is spread from sores, the vast majority of those sores go unrecognized.
http://www.webmd.com/sexual-conditions/guide/syphilis(3 votes)
- Cytokineses is a phase in cell division, in which the cell membrane is formed. Do cytokines have any relation to that?(1 vote)
- It is spelled "cytokinesis", which is very different from a cytokine (or cytokines - plural).(2 votes)
- Seeing that syphilis can cause maculopapular on the palm and soles, I wonder, what's the difference between these maculopapular from the Janeway lesions that appear in Endocarditis?(1 vote)
- macolopapular rash on palms and soles is more common in secondary and congenital syphilis, unlike the Janeway lesions which are uncommon.(1 vote)
- Do you have PDF version of this?(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] Syphilis is a fascinating sexually transmitted infection. It's caused by a bacterium referred to as treponema pallidum, treponema pallidum. It's part of this genus of
bacteria referred to as treponem, sometimes you'll hear it
referred to as a treponem, or it can also be referred
to as a spirochete. A spirochete, which is the
name for a group of bacteria that literally look like a spiral. So it looks like this
when you inspect a sample that's been infected with
syphilis under a microscope, and we'll talk more about
that in a separate video. And what makes syphilis
very interesting today, so I'll put spirochete on my Y axis, and I'll make time our X axis. We'll see that syphilis dropped
over the years, until about the year 2000, when it actually
started going up again. So I'll label right here as about 2000. So the rate of syphilis
infection has been increasing slowly in recent years. And the group that's seen the
greatest rise in incidents, are men who have sex with men. So let's take a better look
at syphilis, and figure out how it's spread from
one person to another. And as you might recall,
this process is referred to as transmission, so a sexually
transmitted infection is transmitted from one person to another. And of course with an STI, the most common mode of transmission is sex. That includes oral sex,
vaginal sex, and anal sex. And childbirth is a
very important mechanism of transmission as well. Now the interesting thing
about syphilis is that it can only live within
the cells of human beings. Which means that if we cured
everyone on the planet that had syphilis, we could
effectively eradicate the disease. But the trick with syphilis is identifying it when it occurs. Sir William Osler, the person
who many consider to be the father of modern
medicine, called syphilis "the great imitator",
because it can masquerade as a variety of different disorders. And we'll talk about
why that is in a minute, but the trick with syphilis
is to try and identify what stage a person is infected with. So let's go through the different stages. Starting with the point
when a person is infected, it will take about three weeks. So I'll write here three weeks. So three weeks before
they show any symptoms. And this first stage in which
they begin to show symptoms is referred to as primary
syphilis, primary syphilis. So with primary syphilis,
the majority of your symptoms will occur at the site
of contact, or where the infection is directly spread to. That means that the
organs initially affected will be your genital organs. So let's take a look at
our friend right here, this poor guy that's going
to have all the different signs and symptoms of syphilis. So let's take a look at a
zoom-in of his genital organs. Primary syphilis will
have two main features. The most classic thing, and
I'll abbreviate right here, primary syphilis, so the first
of the two classic things you'll see, is what's
referred to as a chancre, a chancre, which just means a lesion that can occur on the shaft
or on the tip of the penis. In a female, this would
occur on the cervix. And it's a fairly gruesome looking ulcer, it's very indurated,
and so you'll see these edges right here, so I'm
trying to imply that it's a very deep, indurated lesion. Which looks bad, but the
interesting thing about the chancre, is that it's painless. Which is an important
distinction to make between syphilis and another STI
referred to as chancroid. Where you'd see a chancre, but this one will definitely be painful. The other thing you might
see is what's referred to as a lymphadenopathy,
lymphadenopathy, or LAD. And that just means that the
lymph nodes that you have, commonly the regional ones
located near the genital tract. So the inguinal lymph nodes
that are along the crease, here along the waistline,
they're going to be larger. And they may even be painful. So you'll have inguinal lymphadenopathy. So this lymphadenopathy and the chancre tend to heal in about three to six weeks, whether you give this
person treatment or not. And after that they'll further progress, over the course of about nine weeks, to secondary syphilis, secondary syphilis, and I'll just write secondary for now. Now with secondary
syphilis, this spirochete spreads from the genital
tract to the bloodstream. And starts to cause
more systemic symptoms, so symptoms you see elsewhere
than just in the genitals. And because white blood cells
will go chasing after syphilis in secondary syphilis, so
this is how I'll abbreviate secondary syphilis right here. One of the first things you
might see in secondary syphilis because of the white blood
cells attacking the treponem, is fever, and if you
take a look down here, I've drawn a blood vessel where you've got the endothelial cells that
line a blood vessel over here, drawn out, so let's say that
the treponem seeds into a blood vessel here, and
one of the characteristic things about syphilis is
that it likes to invade these endothelial cells. And so you might see them inside here. Now, white blood cells will
respond to this infection, and attack syphilis with a vengeance. And they'll do this by
swallowing up the syphilis. They can also cause cell death for the infected endothelial
cells, through a process called apoptosis, or they'll
release these compounds into the bloodstream, these cytokines that are supposed to signal to the body that it's under attack. And these compounds are called cytokines. So I'll label right here,
these are cytokines, that will, to a certain extent, tell cells what to do, so
cytokines can trigger cells to undergo apoptosis and die. But they can also travel
through the bloodstream, and up here, to the brain, where they can signal the brain to raise
the body temperature, resulting in a fever. And this is one of the
classic features that occurs when white blood cells are
attacking some invading pathogen, all under this process
referred to as inflammation. Another result of that can
include more lymphadenopathy, so you'll have swelling at the lymph nodes that may occur regionally, or
even elsewhere in the body. But more locally with secondary
syphilis at the genitals now instead of the painless
chancre, we may start to see these large warts known as condyloma lata. Or if you're referring
to a single one of these warty lesions, you can refer
to them as a condylomata latum. So this looks like a large white wart, that likes to form on mucous membranes. Which means the tip of
the penis, or the cervix, or the vaginal wall in a woman, or even on the inside of the mouth. And what these represent are
the syphilis bacteria that are actively fighting the white
blood cells that are there. And these tend to be painless as well. And finally, one of the
last classic symptoms you'll see with secondary syphilis, is this very characteristic skin rash that's referred to as a maculo, so maculo meaning just
flat, maculopapular. Which means, ironically, raised. So either a flat or a raised rash. A maculopapular rash that
occurs all over the body, as you'll see down here. But one of the things that makes this rash very unique to syphilis,
is that it'll appear on your palms, and even
the soles of your feet. Which is something that
very few diseases can do. Usually rashes will occur
elsewhere in the body, all over anywhere, but not
on your palms or your soles. That actually cuts down
the differential diagnosis to a few things. And keep in mind, it's not
going to be just a single lesion that characterizes this rash. You're going to see a
bunch of these occurring on your palms, your soles, your
arms, your belly, all over. And this just represents the treponem spreading to the layers of your skin, and the white blood cells
that are fighting them. So they're essentially a
result of inflammation as well. All right, so after secondary syphilis, these symptoms will go
away, and they'll take also about three to six weeks to heal. And within two years of
this initial infection, we'll arrive at a stage referred to as early latent syphilis. Early latent syphilis. And when we say that
syphilis has become latent, that indicates that we have no symptoms. So there are no symptoms, and I'll abbreviate symptoms as SX. The same holds true for
the next stage of syphilis, which is referred to as
late latent syphilis. So here too we have no symptoms. But the other difference are
that early latent syphilis is more likely to have
a relapse of symptoms. So more likely to relapse, but also, early latent syphilis is more contagious than late latent syphilis. And these two points make sense because early latent syphilis is
closer in time to the point when we had our initial infection, because it happens within two years. Whereas late latent syphilis
will occur after two years. So after two years of
the initial infection. So if we're at the two
year and one day mark after we've had our initial infection, and we don't have symptoms anymore, that means we are in late latent syphilis.