Treponema pallidum pallidum

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Treponema pallidum pallidum /
Revision as of 11:55, 2 December 2019 by Aidan (talk | contribs) (: added Hitzig zones)
  • Causes syphilis

Stages

  • Primary syphilis (incubation 2 to 6 weeks)
  • Secondary syphilis (incubation 3 weeks to 3 months)
  • Tertiary syphilis (incubation years to decades)
    • Cardiovascular
    • Gummatous
    • Neurosyphilis
      • Meningovascular
      • Parenchymatous
      • Tabes dorsalis

Primary syphilis

  • Incubation period is about 3 weeks
  • Chancre
  • Ulcerative lesion
    • Clean borders
    • Indurated
    • Not painful unless secondarily infected
    • Lasts 2 to 6 weeks
  • May present with regional lymphadenopathy
  • Diagnosis with darkfield microscopy, fluorescent antibody smear, or (most commonly) serology
  • Serology often negative in early syphilis

Secondary syphilis

  • Incubation period 3 weeks to 3 months
  • Often no history of chancre
  • Diffuse maculopapular rash that involves palms and soles
    • Can have extremely variable presentation
  • Generalized lymphadenopathy
  • Fever, chills, arthralgias
  • Less common: condyloma lata, aseptic meningitis, iritis, mucosal white patches, glomerulonephritis, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, hepatitis

Tertiary syphilis

Neurosyphilis

  • Most common tertiary syphilis (75%)
  • Incubation period is 7-15 years
  • Three major presentations: meningovascular syphilis, parenchymous syphilis, and tabse dorsalis

Meningovascular

  • Most common neurosyphilis
  • Subdivided into cerebromeningeal (diffuse or focal) and cerebrovascular
  • Stroke-like symptoms, especially MCA or basilar territory
  • Can present as a sudden change, as syphilitic apoplexy
  • Can present following a prodrome of weeks to months of non-specific headaches, vertigo, irritability, insomnia, and personality changes

Parenchymatous

  • Previously known as "generalized paresis of the insane"
  • Commonly found on psychiatric wards
  • Causes psychosis and dementia
  • Later, coarse tremors, Argyll-Robinson pupil, paresis

Tabes dorsalis

  • Least common neurosyphilis
  • Isolated posterior cord degeneration leading to a loss of proprioception in the lower extremities
  • Stomp the ground when walking to use intact pain/pressure sensation
  • Loss of sensation in the Hitzig zones (tip of nose, band including nipple area, medial forearms, and lateral leg)
  • Can present with Charcot foot and, rarely, recurrent abdominal pain
  • Diagnosed by serum CMIA, but RPR may be negative

Others

  • Isolated ocular neurosyphilis
  • Meningitis: can present at any time during the course of disease
  • Others

Cardiovascular syphilis

  • Incubation period is 20-25 years
  • Aortic root involvement leading to aortitis and dilatation
  • May result in aneurysm, aortic insufficiency, or angina secondary to stenosis at the aortic root
  • Diagnosed by RPR +/- CMIA

Gummatous syphilis

  • Least common (10-15%) tertiary syphilis
  • Incubation period 6-8 years
  • Gummas may appear anywhere, in any organ
  • CNS lesions look like toxo, so beware in HIV patients

Other presentations

  • Isolated auditory syphilis
  • Isolated optic syphilis

Latent syphilis

  • Most common form of syphilis is latent, at any stage

Diagnosis

  • Often done as non-treponemal test to screen, followed by treponemal test to confirm
  • In Ontario, we do a treponemal test to screen (CMIA), then repeat it with a more specific treponemal test (TPPA) alongside RPR

Direct visualization

  • Darkfield microscopy
    • Chancre cleaned and smear obtained
    • Smear must be visualized immediately
    • Sensitivity decreases with duration
  • Smear for fluorescent monoclonal antibody
    • Best to use in primary syphilis

Non-treponemal tests (VDRL/RPR)

  • Veneral Diseases Research Laboratory (VDRL) has been replaced by the rapid plasma reagin (RPR) test
    • Quantitative tests for a non-specific anti-cardiolipin antibody that is produced in syphilitic (and other) infections
  • False positives in pregnancy, autoimmune disorders (lupus, APLA), and chronic infections (leishmaniasis, leprosy, ...)
  • 50% sensitive in primary, 100% sensitive in secondary
  • Tests will eventually become nonreactive

Treponemal tests

  • More specific and sensitive, but more expensive
  • False positive in lupus and Lyme disease
  • Remain positive for life
  • Four main tests:
    • Fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption (FTA-Abs): Essentially the gold standard
    • Chemoluminescnence microparticle immunoassay (CMIA or CLIA): the screening test used in Ontario. Often used as a screening test as it is an easily-automated immunoassay and is more sensitive and specific than RPR.
    • Treponema pallidum Particulate Agglutination assay (TPPA): a modification of the TPHA. Used as the confirmatory test (alongside RPR) used in Ontario.
    • T. pallidum hemagglutination assay (TPHA): very old test.
    • T. pallidum enzyme immunassay (TP-EIA)

Interpretation of serology

CMIA screen RPR TPPA Interpretation
Non-reactive Negative result; or early syphilis (consider repeat in 4 weeks)
Reactive Reactive Reactive Recent or prior syphilis infection
Reactive Non-reactive Reactive Recent or prior syphilis infection
Reactive Non-reactive Non-reactive False positive; or early syphilis, previously treated, or late latent (repeat in 4 weeks)
Reactive Non-reactive Indeterminate Inconclusive result; false positive, early syphilis, old treated syphilis, or old untreated syphilis (repeat in 4 weeks)
Reactive Reactive Non-reactive Inconclusive result; false positive, early syphilis, old treated syphilis, or untreated syphilis (repeat in 4 weeks)
Reactive Reactive Indeterminate Recent or prior syphilis infection

Treatment

Primary and secondary

  • Benzethine penicillin G 2.4 million units IM once, divided between two buttocks
  • Alternative (penicillin allergy): doxycycline 100mg BID for 2 weeks
  • Alternative (penicillin allergy and pregnancy): penicillin desensitization or azithromycin

Tertiary

  • Benzethine penicillin G 2.4 million units IM q1week for 3 weeks
  • Alternative (penicillin allergy): doxycycline for 30 days
  • Monitor response with RPR titres, which should drop 4-fold within 6 months

Tertiary (Neurosyphilis)

  • Penicillin G 4 million units IV q4h for 10 to 14 days
  • Often followed by at least one dose of IM benzethine penicillin, sometimes weekly for 2-3 weeks

References

  1. ^  Nicolò Girometti, Muhammad H Junejo, Diarmuid Nugent, Alan McOwan, Gary Whitlock, Keerti Gedela, Sheel Patel, Tara Suchak, Victoria Tittle. Clinical and serological outcomes in patients treated with oral doxycycline for early neurosyphilis. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. 2021;76(7):1916-1919. doi:10.1093/jac/dkab100.