Syphilis | Clinical Presentation.
Treponema pallidum Syphilis
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Regular human syphilis tests can disease-year rash
Syphilis-Diarrheal Skin Disease and STD Room
Through programs to improve population financial knowledge.
Do you know everything about arterial hypertension? According to one view, syphilis was brought to Europe by sailors from Columbus after it was discovered in the United States. It is said that the sailor's infection came from local residents, while the latter was engaged in bestiality from llamas (spiroworm disease in these animals has long been known and confirmed). The Americans who support this theory are called Americans. This fact points out that after the expedition returned in 1494, cases of the disease began to be recorded in Spanish port cities. Many Spaniards served as mercenaries to King Charles VIII of France, because the army was defeated, the siege of Naples was lifted, Au Sable Forks theatrepub and the soldiers were disbanded. The infection spread rapidly in Europe, causing syphilis epidemics. According to the second theory, syphilis has been present in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East since prehistoric times. In her book, she describes lesions similar to hard, broad, and papular syphilis, as well as skin and muscle lesions of third-generation syphilis. The Chinese manuscript dates back to 4536. British Columbia describes the use of gouache to treat infantile syphilis. Syphilis is described in a book on Japanese medicine in 809 BC. During archaeological excavations, bones affected by syphilis were found, which belonged to a person who lived in the middle of the second century BC. Among primitive people, there is also a theory of syphilis in Africa. Theorists believe that, but it is possible that as long as a person exists, there will be sexually transmitted diseases, of which the oldest and most dangerous is syphilis. Many scientists have studied this disease and have made a great contribution to the development and staging of syphilis. They have done good research on syphilis and gonorrhea, but all doctors condemned the method he used. From 1832 to 1839, he used the secretions of 2,627 STD patients to contract 701 people with syphilis and 668 people with gonorrhea. The pathogen itself-Treponema pallidum was described in 1907 (et al.). In 1907, he discovered a serological reaction for diagnosing syphilis, called reaction. After more than 101 years of improvement, in 2007, it was officially abolished due to the transition to a more sensitive and specific reaction. In the treatment of syphilis, a breakthrough was made in 1944, using penicillin, which was discovered by Fleming in 1930.
During this period, after contact with syphilis patients, papules appear on the pale syphilis penetration site, which quickly ulcers and turns into erosions or ulcers-with very characteristic signs, that is, painless, dense base, clear boundaries, 3 to 16 in diameter. Any rash on the genital area is very painful, so painless sores should be a serious reminder of syphilis. Two weeks after the appearance of the ulcer, the lymph nodes increase. When located on the genitals, these are the inguinal lymph nodes. For syphilis, the swollen nodules can reach the size of a plum, but are firm and painless. If there is a secondary infection, erosion and swollen lymph nodes may be painful and inflamed, which is not common in syphilis. The most common location of the primary lower foot path is the penis, vulva, labia minora, coronal sulcus or dorsal side of the vagina, and less commonly the scrotum, cervix, rectum, tongue, and lips. Since primary syphilis (chute) is painless, it may go unnoticed, or they may not pay attention to it and not associate it with such a serious disease. The ulcer can heal spontaneously within 2-4 weeks without leaving a scar. At this time, some patients may develop polyademitis (many lymph nodes increase). In the initial stage of syphilis, there are two stages, which are seronegative (when syphilis is tested in the blood, the reaction will give a negative result). This is possible when the patient becomes infected when hard puncture has just occurred, because the surface of the ulcer contains a lot of syphilis. 5-7 days after the onset of hard depression, the serum reaction gradually increases, and the diagnosis can be confirmed by the laboratory. One week after infection, usually during this period, after a short prodromal period, the patient has healed with the following symptoms: fever, headache, swollen lymph nodes, fatigue, rash. From the moment the rash appears, the second stage of syphilis begins. Usually, a rash in the form of roseola (spots) and papules (nodules) appears on the trunk and sides, and sometimes it spreads to the entire body, palms and soles of the feet. The rash is not disturbing, and the skin is not itchy. In high-humidity areas of the body (groin and perianal area), a flat rash may form with a whitish surface and exudate-broad warts. These rashes contain a large number of pathogens and are highly contagious. Any sexual contact and rash in syphilis patients, whether sexual or non-sexual, can cause syphilis. It should be pointed out that pale syphilis can infiltrate the human body only when there is a slight damage to the skin and mucous membranes, so not all people may be infected after contact with a patient. The rash of secondary syphilis usually disappears without treatment after 2-4 weeks, and the remission period begins. When the skin and mucous membranes are clean, the rash may reappear (recurrence of the rash), and secondary syphilis begins, in which the rash is sparse and pale. With secondary syphilis, hair loss (due to lesions or spread throughout the head) may occur. With the particularly aggressive development of the disease, damage to internal organs and nervous system, mental disorders are possible. In many patients at this stage, if the patient does not notice the lower bone and misses the onset of the disease, there is no secondary rash (which also happens frequently), so he does not receive special treatment-syphilis enters the incubation period. Patients do not need to worry about anything. In this state, they can feel absolutely healthy throughout their lives. Only a blood test can show the existence of this disease. If left untreated, after years of treatment in the incubation period, neurosyphilis and cardiovascular disease may develop. Neurosyphilis may be asymptomatic, or it may manifest as meningeal vascular syphilis, latissimus dorsi, or progressive paralysis. Myocarditis-appears in the form of dermatitis, usually asymptomatic, and may be complicated by coronary artery stenosis, aortic valve insufficiency, and aortic aneurysm. When testing for syphilis, there are syphilis tests and non-syphilis tests. The most common tests (and) apply to all patients in neurology, cardiology, gynecology, and eye hospitals. The most common test is microreaction (with cardiolipin antigen). Any of these tests can cause false positive results for syphilis. On the basis of dermatology pharmacies, more research is being carried out. The so-called syphilis test refers to immunofluorescence reaction and test (-), which is one of the most specific tests for syphilis. Treponema pallidum Syphilis
Syphilis-Diarrheal Skin Disease and STD Room

Through programs to improve population financial knowledge.

Do you know everything about arterial hypertension? According to one view, syphilis was brought to Europe by sailors from Columbus after it was discovered in the United States. It is said that the sailor's infection came from local residents, while the latter was engaged in bestiality from llamas (spiroworm disease in these animals has long been known and confirmed). The Americans who support this theory are called Americans. This fact points out that after the expedition returned in 1494, cases of the disease began to be recorded in Spanish port cities. Many Spaniards served as mercenaries to King Charles VIII of France, because the army was defeated, the siege of Naples was lifted, Au Sable Forks theatrepub and the soldiers were disbanded. The infection spread rapidly in Europe, causing syphilis epidemics. According to the second theory, syphilis has been present in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East since prehistoric times. In her book, she describes lesions similar to hard, broad, and papular syphilis, as well as skin and muscle lesions of third-generation syphilis. The Chinese manuscript dates back to 4536. British Columbia describes the use of gouache to treat infantile syphilis. Syphilis is described in a book on Japanese medicine in 809 BC. During archaeological excavations, bones affected by syphilis were found, which belonged to a person who lived in the middle of the second century BC. Among primitive people, there is also a theory of syphilis in Africa. Theorists believe that, but it is possible that as long as a person exists, there will be sexually transmitted diseases, of which the oldest and most dangerous is syphilis. Many scientists have studied this disease and have made a great contribution to the development and staging of syphilis. They have done good research on syphilis and gonorrhea, but all doctors condemned the method he used. From 1832 to 1839, he used the secretions of 2,627 STD patients to contract 701 people with syphilis and 668 people with gonorrhea. The pathogen itself-Treponema pallidum was described in 1907 (et al.). In 1907, he discovered a serological reaction for diagnosing syphilis, called reaction. After more than 101 years of improvement, in 2007, it was officially abolished due to the transition to a more sensitive and specific reaction. In the treatment of syphilis, a breakthrough was made in 1944, using penicillin, which was discovered by Fleming in 1930.

During this period, after contact with syphilis patients, papules appear on the pale syphilis penetration site, which quickly ulcers and turns into erosions or ulcers-with very characteristic signs, that is, painless, dense base, clear boundaries, 3 to 16 in diameter. Any rash on the genital area is very painful, so painless sores should be a serious reminder of syphilis. Two weeks after the appearance of the ulcer, the lymph nodes increase. When located on the genitals, these are the inguinal lymph nodes. For syphilis, the swollen nodules can reach the size of a plum, but are firm and painless. If there is a secondary infection, erosion and swollen lymph nodes may be painful and inflamed, which is not common in syphilis. The most common location of the primary lower foot path is the penis, vulva, labia minora, coronal sulcus or dorsal side of the vagina, and less commonly the scrotum, cervix, rectum, tongue, and lips. Since primary syphilis (chute) is painless, it may go unnoticed, or they may not pay attention to it and not associate it with such a serious disease. The ulcer can heal spontaneously within 2-4 weeks without leaving a scar. At this time, some patients may develop polyademitis (many lymph nodes increase). In the initial stage of syphilis, there are two stages, which are seronegative (when syphilis is tested in the blood, the reaction will give a negative result). This is possible when the patient becomes infected when hard puncture has just occurred, because the surface of the ulcer contains a lot of syphilis. 5-7 days after the onset of hard depression, the serum reaction gradually increases, and the diagnosis can be confirmed by the laboratory. One week after infection, usually during this period, after a short prodromal period, the patient has healed with the following symptoms: fever, headache, swollen lymph nodes, fatigue, rash. From the moment the rash appears, the second stage of syphilis begins. Usually, a rash in the form of roseola (spots) and papules (nodules) appears on the trunk and sides, and sometimes it spreads to the entire body, palms and soles of the feet. The rash is not disturbing, and the skin is not itchy. In high-humidity areas of the body (groin and perianal area), a flat rash may form with a whitish surface and exudate-broad warts. These rashes contain a large number of pathogens and are highly contagious. Any sexual contact and rash in syphilis patients, whether sexual or non-sexual, can cause syphilis. It should be pointed out that pale syphilis can infiltrate the human body only when there is a slight damage to the skin and mucous membranes, so not all people may be infected after contact with a patient. The rash of secondary syphilis usually disappears without treatment after 2-4 weeks, and the remission period begins. When the skin and mucous membranes are clean, the rash may reappear (recurrence of the rash), and secondary syphilis begins, in which the rash is sparse and pale. With secondary syphilis, hair loss (due to lesions or spread throughout the head) may occur. With the particularly aggressive development of the disease, damage to internal organs and nervous system, mental disorders are possible. In many patients at this stage, if the patient does not notice the lower bone and misses the onset of the disease, there is no secondary rash (which also happens frequently), so he does not receive special treatment-syphilis enters the incubation period. Patients do not need to worry about anything. In this state, they can feel absolutely healthy throughout their lives. Only a blood test can show the existence of this disease. If left untreated, after years of treatment in the incubation period, neurosyphilis and cardiovascular disease may develop. Neurosyphilis may be asymptomatic, or it may manifest as meningeal vascular syphilis, latissimus dorsi, or progressive paralysis. Myocarditis-appears in the form of dermatitis, usually asymptomatic, and may be complicated by coronary artery stenosis, aortic valve insufficiency, and aortic aneurysm. When testing for syphilis, there are syphilis tests and non-syphilis tests. The most common tests (and) apply to all patients in neurology, cardiology, gynecology, and eye hospitals. The most common test is microreaction (with cardiolipin antigen). Any of these tests can cause false positive results for syphilis. On the basis of dermatology pharmacies, more research is being carried out. The so-called syphilis test refers to immunofluorescence reaction and test (-), which is one of the most specific tests for syphilis. Treponema pallidum Syphilis