A case-control study was conducted to evaluate two main questions: 1) which specific sex- and drug-use behaviors are associated with the acquisition of early syphilis; and 2) whether changes in sex- and drug-use behaviors from 1987-1990 associated with acquisition of early syphilis. Risk factors associated with significant odds ratio were greater than four sex partners and lack of condom use in the past 3 months. Crack use within the past 3 months was the only specific drug-related risk factor with a significantly elevated odds ratio. However, a number of risk factors associated with both sex and drugs had significantly elevated odds ratios: number of drug-using partners, number of partners exchanging sex for drugs and money, and number of partners with whom the respondent shares sex and drugs. Risk estimates for early syphilis were uniformly higher for women as compared with men. Women appeared to be at higher risk of syphilis than men when engaged in the same high-risk activities. From 1987-1990, there was a significant change from lower-risk to higher-risk behaviors among patients. Patients showed an increase in their number of sex partners, in drug use, and in other high-risk activities. Increasing rates of syphilis can be attributed to a particular set of sex- and drug-related behaviors, and an increase in the adoption of these behaviors has probably contributed significantly to the increased rate of early syphilis in Trenton, NJ, during the period from 1987-1990.
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Med Hist
January 2025
Independent Scholar.
Historical research on efforts to reduce the stigma associated with venereal disease (VD) generally dates these campaigns back to the 1930s. Within the United States, one of the earliest attempts to detach VD from its traditional association with sexual immorality occurred during the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century, when the New York City dermatologist Lucius Bulkley coined the term ('syphilis of the innocent') in the hopes of demonstrating that many of those who contracted this disease did so through non-sexual contact. Gaining widespread acceptance within the medical community, Bulkley's ideas served as the intellectual foundation for a discursive assault on the prevailing belief that syphilis constituted the 'wages of sin'-one designed to destigmatise the disease and to promote more scientific responses to it.
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January 2025
School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Scotland, Zoology Building, Tillydrone Avenue, AB24 2TZ Aberdeen, Scotland, United Kingdom.
A novel panel of peptide for serological identification of Borrelia burgdoferi sensu stricto, Borrelia garinii and Borrelia afzelii was developed and assessed in this study. The diagnostic algorithm of the novel test was initially trained testing 10 US human sera including 3 early-stage and 3 late-stage Lyme disease positive sera, 2 sera positive for Babesia and 2 sera positive for Syphilis, all purchased from a private biorepository. Findings were then corroborated testing (a) 33 additional EU follow-up positive sera from seroconverted patients bitten by ticks that tested positive for B.
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December 2024
Internal Medicine, Florida International University, Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Miami, USA.
Syphilis, an infection caused by , is well known for its ability to mimic other diseases across various organ systems, complicating timely diagnosis. Ocular syphilis, though rare, is a severe manifestation that can closely resemble other eye conditions, making early identification challenging. When conventional treatments fail to improve symptoms, considering syphilis in the differential diagnosis becomes crucial to avoid further complications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
December 2024
General and Oncological Dermatology Ward with a Day Care Unit, Provincial Hospital, Opole, POL.
The diagnostic process and discrimination of mucosal lesions present a formidable challenge for numerous clinicians, primarily attributable to the common overlap of clinical manifestations observed across various categories, including infectious, autoimmune, connective tissue, and systemic vascular inflammatory diseases. In cases of mucosal lesions, syphilis presents distinctive characteristics that can help clinicians differentiate it from other conditions. The most common manifestation of primary syphilis is mostly a painless, firm, indurated ulcer known as a chancre, which typically appears at the site of inoculation, with enlargement of regional lymph nodes.
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Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital and National Taiwan University College of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan.
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