Does syphilis second stage itch
summary
I have a good friend who told me a few days ago that she had syphilis, which may be caused by the disorder of her sexual relationship. Let's talk about syphilis secondary itching.
Does syphilis second stage itch
First: first stage syphilis symptom: after infection 2-4 weeks appears the hard chancre, mostly occurs in the genital part, the male in the coronal groove, the penis, the foreskin and so on. Women in the size of the labia or cervix. At the beginning, it is a papule, which quickly breaks into a small red ulcer, with a small amount of serous secretions, containing a large number of Treponema pallidum. The hard chancre is often single, with cartilaginous hardness and no pain.
Second: secondary syphilis symptoms: secondary syphilis generally occurs in 7 ~ 10 weeks after infection or 6 ~ 8 weeks after chancre, a few cases. Secondary lesions may overlap with chancre. Treponema pallidum spreads throughout the body through blood, mainly with skin and mucous membrane damage, as well as bone, sensory organs and nerve damage. Infectious, rash before often low fever, headache, muscle, joint and bone soreness and other precursor symptoms.
Third: the third stage of syphilis symptoms: due to Treponema pallidum from lymph nodes into the blood, spread in the body after systemic symptoms, in 7-10 weeks after infection, there can be low fever, headache, muscle and joint pain, systemic lymphadenopathy. Skin rash appeared all over the body, such as macula, papule, pustule, oyster shell rash, copper red, a small amount of scales attached. It is often symmetrically distributed, dense and not fused.
matters needing attention
The early symptoms of syphilis are round or oval, clear boundary, clean edge, dike like uplift, surrounded by dark red infiltration, with characteristic cartilage like hardness, flat base, no pus, with fibrin like membrane on the surface, which is not easy to remove. If it is slightly squeezed, there may be a small amount of serous exudate, containing a large number of Treponema pallidum, which is an important source of infection.