Syphilis: Alive and Well

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Syphilis: Alive and Well

Syphilis, the word brings to mind to most a disease of the past. In truth syphilis is alive and well today and a very active participant in that select club known as sexually transmitted infections (STI). By no means is syphilis the terrible killer that it was for over 400 years. The invention of penicillin reduced the cases of syphilis astronomically. Yet, even though there is a simple treatment for syphilis, people still are infected with it today and fail to receive treatment and then infect others keeping the vicious cycle of syphilis alive.

Syphilis is an infection caused by a bacteria called Treponema Pallidum (CDC, 2004). This bacteria is extremely fragile, and cannot be spread during contact with objects such as toilet seats or towels. It is transmitted by sexual contact or from a mother to her unborn child. The bacteria enters the body through mucous membranes or open skin, once inside the body the bacteria enters the blood stream and attaches to cells and if left untreated can ravage a body and even cause death (Syphilis, 2003).

Syphilis is very similar to other sexually transmitted diseases in the manner that it is transmitted. The best ways to avoid infection is by either abstinence or "safe sex" through the use of barrier protection or sex with a known tested uninfected individual.

One of the scariest points on syphilis is that it is one of the few sexually transmitted infections that can kill, AIDS being the other one. The tragedy with syphilis is that there is a known, very effective treatment that cures an individual of the infection. The victims of AIDS do not have this option.

The first documented cases of syphilis began to appear in Europe soon after Christopher Colum...

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