syphilis tends to develop to the secondary and
tertiary stages. (Avelleira et al., 2006)
Syphilis is divided into three distinct stages:
primary, secondary, and tertiary stages according to
clinical examination, patient medical history, and
time of infection. Primary syphilis lesion is solitary
red papule that forms a painless ulcer or chancre
within three weeks after exposure. (Lautenschlager,
2006)
HIV coinfection can be associated with several
chancres (up to 70% of patients) that are larger and
deeper than people who are not infected with HIV. ".
(Zetola et al., 2002)
Secondary syphilis lesions usually appear 6-10
weeks after healing of primary syphilis.
(Lautenschlager, 2006) Genital ulcer, in this case,
appeared two months before plaques on palms and
feet soles, possibly primary syphilis because lesion’s
base was clean, painless, cured without treatment,
and period of lesions appeared suitable to the period
of chancre before secondary syphilis lesions
appeared.
The manifestation of secondary syphilis is
generally a maculopapular exanthema or
papulosquamous with constitutional symptoms,
diffuse lymphadenopathy, and highly infectious skin
lesions. In the early stages of secondary syphilis, the
manifestations resolution of skin and lymph nodes
can occur without treatment. (Peeling et al., 2005)
Secondary syphilis lesions generally affect the palms
and feet soles, but about 75% of patients have
diffuse and symmetrical lesions. (Lautenschlager et al.,
2006) Sometimes there are a lot of thick scales that
give a form of psoriasis lesions. HIV-positive
patients present with more aggressive secondary
syphilis, accompanied by constitutional symptoms,
organ involvement, and atypical rash (karp et al
2009) Other typical clinical manifestations include
lichenoid, papulopustular, psoriasiform, vesicular or
corymbiform lesions (Gianfaldoni et a., 2017) Nail
involvement and periungual tissue changes are
reported can occur in syphilis secondary like
periungual edema, subungual hyperkeratosis,
discolorization, and onychodystroph (Liotta et al.,
2000) but no reports of pitting nails. Skin lesions in
this patient with periungual erythema,
discolorization, onychodystrophy, and pitting nails
mimicking psoriasis, but skin and nail lesions
improve with syphilis treatment so that differential
diagnosis of psoriasis can be ruled out.
Untreated secondary syphilis may get into a
latent stage where there are no clinical
manifestations, and the infection is only detected
through the serological examination. Individuals
with untreated latent syphilis, 15-40% develop into
tertiary syphilis and manifest cardiac or neurological
damage, severe skin or visceral lesions (gumma) or
bone involvement (Peeling et al., 2005) HIV
infection predisposes to neuro-ophthalmological
complications in syphilis patients with HIV
coinfection. Most patients with early syphilis who
have cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) abnormalities do not
show symptoms of the central nervous system, so
CSF analysis can help to confirm abnormalities.
Lumbar puncture and CSF analysis are currently
only recommended for the diagnosis of
neurosyphilis in individuals with appropriate clinical
syndromes, evaluating the possibility of treatment
failure, and for some patients with latent syphilis.
(Zetola et al., 2007; Pastuszcak et al., 2011) In this
case, we did not perform CSF examination because
there was no neurological abnormalities and
symptoms of ophthalmic, auditory, cognitive, motor,
or sensory deficits.
Patients had plaque-shaped lesions, and no ulcer
lesions that Treponema pallidum was not examined
under a dark-field microscope. Plaque lesions were
in accordance with the form of secondary syphilis
lesions so that syphilis serological examination was
performed. Serological examination in most people
infected with HIV is similar to patients who are not
infected with HIV. However, titers are too high or
too low, and false negatives can occur in some cases.
Several studies have shown that syphilis can cause a
transient increase in viral load, induce lymphocyte
and CD4 apoptosis, and a reduction in CD4 cell
count, which improves after the infection is treated.
Syphilis is estimated to increase 2 to 9-fold HIV
transmission.(Oh Y Kim et al., 2012)
Syphilis has diverse clinical and
histopathological presentations. The biopsy can be
used to make a diagnosis with atypical syphilis
lesions as the case above. The varied clinical
presentation of secondary syphilis, especially in HIV
disease, can lead to incorrect diagnosis and improper
treatment. Histology of secondary syphilis lesions is
generally obtained plasma cells infiltrates in
perivascular or diffuse with endothelial swelling and
vascular proliferation. Sometimes non-caseous
granulomas are found, basal cell vacuolar
degeneration, acanthosis, spongiosis or exocytosis of
lymphocytes. In addition, other features include
lichenoid inflammatory reactions (in lichen planus)
and/or psoriasiform patterns (a type of
psoriasis).(Palacios et al., 2007) Biopsy, in this
case, is obtained by plasma cells in the upper dermis,
perivascular, and periadnexa, with psoriasiform
acanthosis, so that they are appropriate with
secondary syphilis with psoriasiform patterns.