According to WHO, syphilis represents 3% of all sexually transmitted diseases. Additionally, the occurence of this disease has also been increasing in developed countries. The secondary stage of syphilis is characterized by a large variety of symptoms and may mimic many skin diseases. The generalized exanthem of the secondary stage is often confused with a drug eruption. The systemic involvement may also resemble other diseases. It is due to these peculiarities that syphilis, and in particular its secondary stage, is known in literature as the "clinical chameleon" or "great imitator". Nonspecific neurological symptoms like headache, lightheadedness, and slight mental depression appear prior to the skin manifestations characteristic of the second stage of the disease. Subsequently, when the patient begins to develop the characteristic disseminated maculopapular exanthem with palmoplantar involvement, the clinician may have to re-evaluate to exclude an early form of syphilitic meningoencephalitis. We report here the case of a female patient with suspected endogenous depression as part of the post-climacterium syndrome. Shortly after the introduction of antidepressant therapy the patient developed a generalized maculopapular exanthem. She was seen in the Dermatology clinic due to suspicion for a drug eruption. A diagnosis of secondary syphilis with palmoplantar involvement, associated with an early form of syphilitic meningoencephalitis, was established. After systemic antibiotic treatment, complete remission was achieved.
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Parasites Hosts Dis
May 2023
Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Dali University, Dali, Yunnan Province, China.
Balamuthia mandrillaris amebic encephalitis (BAE) can cause a fatal condition if diagnosis is delayed or effective treatment is lacking. Patients with BAE have been previously reported in 12 provinces of China, with skin lesions being the primary symptom and encephalitis developing after several years. However, a significantly lower number of cases has been reported in Southwest China.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForensic Sci Med Pathol
June 2019
School of Medicine, The University of Adelaide, Level 2 Medical School North Building, Frome Rd, Adelaide, SA, 5005, Australia.
Syphilis is an increasingly diagnosed venereal disease which has four distinctive stages that may last over decades if appropriate treatment is not given. Review of the files of the Pathology Museum in the Faculty of Medicine at The University of Adelaide revealed three cases with classical cardiovascular and neurological findings. Case 1: An 80-year-old man with a large syphilitic aneurysm of the ascending aorta with a smaller aneurysm of the proximal descending aorta.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVestn Otorinolaringol
September 2015
Research Centre of Reconstructive and Restorative Surgery, Siberian Division of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Irkutsk, Russia, 6640203.
The present paper reports a clinical case of local syphilitic meningoencephalitis known as Argyll-Robertson syndrome and manifested in the form of acute sensorineural loss of hearing. The patient was a 46 year old resident of the city of Irkutsk. He experienced the sharp impairment of hearing involving both ears with the accompanying feeling of dizziness, disturbed orientation of the locomotorbehaviour, the lurching gate, subfebrility, the loss of the ability to speak and write.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To analyze clinical features of the nervous system damage in syphilis taking into account the changes in the content of cerebrospinal fluid and clinical/anatomical brain damages of the brain.
Methods: The study was based on the analysis of 47 case histories of patients hospitalized in 1995-2001. The group included 47 patients, aged from 17 to 60 years.
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