Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-19 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 6, 2007 17:50


1396 Syphilis

tests
Basic Tests
■CSF examination: pleocytosis (>5 WBC/mm3), elevated protein,
+VDRL

Specific Diagnostic Tests
■Darkfield examination: examine fresh specimen of serous exudate
from lesions; identify characteristic corkscrew motility of spirochete;
test of choice (if available) for primary syphilis; not for oral or anal
specimens due to presence of nonpathogenic treponemes.
■Fluorescent antibody microscopy: use if darkfield not available and
for oral and anal specimens
■Non-treponemal serologic tests (RPR and VDRL): Inexpensive, rapid,
quantitative, screening tests, titers correlate with disease activity and
response to therapy:
➣RPR+in 80% primary, 99% secondary, 56% tertiary
➣VDRL+in 70% primary, 99% secondary, 56% tertiary
➣False positive results: IV drug use, pregnancy, autoimmune dis-
ease, immunization, infections (EBV, TB, SBE, malaria)
➣False negatives: early infection, prozone phenomenon (rare)
■Treponemal serologic tests (FTA-ABS, MHA-TP, TPHA): More sensi-
tive, expensive, confirmatory tests
➣FTA-ABS+in 85% primary, 100% secondary, 98% tertiary
➣MHA-TP+in 65% primary, 100% secondary, 95% tertiary

Other Tests
■Chest Xray: linear calcifications in ascending aorta suggestive of car-
diovascular syphilis 1/1/2001

differential diagnosis
■Primary: HSV, chancroid, lymphogranulorna venereum, fixed drug
eruption, traumatic ulcer, aphthous ulcer
■Secondary: drug reaction, pityriasis rosea, viral exanthem, tinea ver-
sicolor, acute guttate psoriasis, condyloma acuminata

management
What to Do First
■Obtain specimens for darkfield microscopy, if available

General Measures
■Test for HIV; consider testing for gonorrhea, chlamydia
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