本頁目錄
- What is syphilis
- Pregnant people have additional risks
- What are the symptoms
- How to protect yourself
- Local stats and trends
- Testing sites in Tompkins County
- Fact sheets for common STIs
- 參考資料
What is syphilis
- Syphilis is a bacterial infection that most often is a sexually transmitted infection (STI).
Who is at risk
- People who are sexually active, especially if they:
- engage in high-risk sexual activity: i.e. having sex without a condom, having multiple sexual partners, having anonymous sex, having sex while using drugs
- have HIV or other sexually transmitted infections;
- are taking pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention; or
- have partner(s) who have tested positive for syphilis
Pregnant people: Your baby is at risk
- Pregnant people should be tested for syphilis 3 times during their pregnancy:
- in the first trimester (your doctor is required by NYS to give you this test)
- in the third trimester
- at birth
- Why testing for syphilis is incredibly important:
- Testing during pregnancy: Having syphilis (a positive test) can cause a low-birth-weight-baby and increase the chance the baby will be delivered too early or stillborn.
- Testing at birth: A baby born with a syphilis infection may not have signs or symptoms of disease at birth. However, if the baby does not receive treatment right away, the baby may develop serious health problems within a few weeks, including cataracts, deafness, seizures or death
What are the symptoms
- Primary stage symptoms include painless sores (called chancres), rashes or lesions. These may begin 10 days after infection and can take up to 3 months to develop. Often these are not noticed by the individual, so the disease progresses untreated.
- Secondary stage symptoms can appear when the primary symptoms are not detected and so not treated. Most common is a rash on different parts of the body, but may also include tiredness, fever, sore throat, headaches, hoarseness, loss of appetite, patchy hair loss and swollen glands.
- Late stage symptoms include difficulty coordinating muscle movements, paralysis, numbness, gradual blindness, and dementia, and can be life threatening.
How to protect yourself and help prevent the spread
- Those at high-risk should test early and test often.
- If you are pregnant, request testing for syphilis if it is not automatically offered.
- If you test positive, share information about recent sexual partners with your healthcare provider to assist with contact tracing efforts to reduce the spread.
- If you test positive, it is important to begin treatment as soon as possible and follow your course of treatment to completion
How soon do symptoms appear
- Symptoms can appear from 10 to 90 days after a person becomes infected, but usually within three to four weeks.
- Symptoms are often not noticed or are thought to be minor abrasions or heat rash and medical care is not sought.
When and for how long is a person able to spread syphilis
- Syphilis is considered to be communicable for a period of up to two years, possibly longer. This depends on the existence of infectious lesions (sores), which may or may not be visible.
- There is no natural immunity to syphilis and past infection offers no protection to the individual.
What is the treatment
- Syphilis is treated with the antibiotics penicillin or tetracycline.
- Pregnant people with a history of allergic reaction to penicillin should undergo penicillin desensitization followed by appropriate penicillin therapy.
- A baby born with the disease needs daily penicillin treatment for 10 days.
What are the complications associated with syphilis
- Untreated syphilis can lead to destruction of soft tissue and bone, heart failure, blindness and a variety of other conditions which may be mild to incapacitating.
- A person with untreated syphilis may transmit the disease to their unborn child, which may result in death or deformity of the child.
- Physicians and hospitals are required to test pregnant people for syphilis at prenatal visits. Tests of newborns or their mothers are required at the time of delivery.
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Testing sites in Tompkins County
- Your Primary Care Provider
- Tompkins County Health Department (TCHD)
- For everyone.
- Free anonymous HIV testing only.
- Results available in 20 minutes.
- Phone (607) 274-6604. Click for Web site.
- Planned Parenthood of Greater New York
- For all Tompkins County residents.
- Free, confidential testing and treatment at the PPGNY Ithaca office, 620 West Seneca St. (Made available by the Tompkins County Health Department)
- Testing for Chlamydia, Gonorrhea, HepC, HIV, and Syphilis
- Phone (607) 273-1513. Click for PPGNY's Ithaca Clinic Web site
- REACH Medical
- STAP — Southern Tier AIDS Program CLICK HERE for their website
- Cornell Health, Cornell University
- Comprehensive sexual health care for students, including free & confidential STI testing.
- Phone (607) 255-5155. Learn more.
- Hammond Health Center, Ithaca College
- For Ithaca College students only.
- STI education; testing available.
- 電話號碼:(607) 274-3177
- TC3 Health Center
- No on-site STI testing available.
- STD education and referrals only.
- Phone (607) 844-8222 x 4487
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Common STIs: Fact sheets
參考資料
- NYS Department of Health (NYSDOH) STI web page
- U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) STI Web page
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