What are Spirochetes
They are thin, helical, Gram negative bacteria
What are the 3 genera of spirochetes responsible for human disease
Treponema, Borrelia, and Leptospira
What is the more common name for Treponema pallidum
Syphilis
What is the epidemiology for Treponema pallidum
What is the pathology of Treponema pallidum
What is the characteristic of Primary syphilis
lesion is a chancre
What is a chancre
What is Secondary Syphilis
What is tertiary syphilis
Develops 5-40 years following initial infection in 1/3 oflatent cases
What is cardiovascular syphilis (tertiary)
Occurs in 10% of patients
• Involves destruction of heart and blood vessels, aneurysms
• Typically inflammation of aorta, valve involvement
What is neurosyphilis
Occurs in 8% of patients
• Syphilitic meningitis
• Organisms attack blood vessels in brain and meninges resulting in cerebrovascular occlusions and death of nerve tissue in the brain
• Tabes dorsalis
• General paresis (of the insane)= paralytic dementia
What is Tabes Dorsalis
What are other pathologies of Syphilis
What is congenital syphilis
What are possible outcomes of congenital syphilis
What are symptoms of early congenital syphilis
What are the symptoms of late congenital syphilis
How is syphilis T. Palladium diagnosed
Dark-field microscopy
Fluorescent antibody microscopy
Serological Tests for Syphilis (STS
What is the Jarisch Herxheimer reaction
What is Treponema pertenue
What is the pathology of Treponema pertenue
What is Treponema carateum
What is Treponema vincentii
What is another name for Borrelia
Relapsing fever