We present a study of biopsies taken from skin lesions of 44 patients presenting with primary or secondary syphilis. In most primary lesions erosion or, more often, ulceration was present, with a dense inflammatory infiltrate. In secondary syphilis a wide variety of histological changes was present. Blood vessels were frequently involved, with marked endothelial swelling and often proliferation. Treponemes were demonstrated with the Steiner staining method in all investigated cases of primary syphilis and in 71% of secondary syphilis cases. Treponemes were present throughout the dermis, particularly perivascularly, and in the dermal-epidermal junction zone. In two specimens of secondary syphilis treponemes were located predominantly in the epidermis, but there were always some microorganisms demonstrable in the dermis. The inflammatory infiltrate was often located in a perivascular coat-sleeve-like arrangement. In this study plasma cells and lymphocytes were present in all specimens of primary and secondary syphilis. Syphilitic lesions differed from yaws lesions mostly in the location of treponemes and the affection of blood vessels. In this histopathological study of early syphilis, treponemes did not show the epidermiotropic character of yaws, and blood vessel changes were more pronounced than in yaws. Unfortunately, due to the protean histopathological manifestations described in venereal syphilis and in yaws, these two treponemal diseases cannot always be differentiated on histological grounds alone.
The results of a yaws survey on the island of Sumatra in Indonesia are presented. The prevalence of yaws in the investigated region was found to be very high, a minimum of 300 cases per 100,000 individuals, which indicates that yaws is far from being eradicated and that campaigns for treatment are necessary. Patients suffering from early infectious yaws showed florid skin lesions. Of 101 serum samples from such patients, 100 had a positive reaction in one or more treponemal tests. The Treponema pallidum haemagglutination assay was found to be the most sensitive test (97% positive) in detecting antibodies against Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue, followed by the fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption test (94%), the Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test and the TmpA enzyme immunoassay (91%), and analysis by Western blot using Treponema pallidum antigens (88%). Of 42 asymptomatic contacts of yaws patients 32 showed positive reactions in one or more tests, indicating that many people in the investigated region have been infected with treponemes. Eight new Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue strains were isolated from yaws skin lesions. In vitro amplification of treponemal DNA and hybridisation with specific DNA probes showed that all eight strains were identical with Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue CDC 2575, with regard to the subsp. pertenue specific tyfl gene.
Early yaws in a 9 year old girl from Ghana, diagnosed as imported disease in The Netherlands is reported. She had lived in The Netherlands for six months. Tropical non-venereal treponematoses are rarely seen in Europe, and only a few case reports have been published. Migration and travelling may confront the medical profession with cases of tropical diseases such as yaws. Positive serological reactions in non-venereal tropical or venereal treponematoses cannot be distinguished at present.
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