Syphilis Essay

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As an undergraduate student the one word that you don’t want to hear from the doctors during a check-up or from a significant other is the word “syphilis”. This is like social suicide in addition to the obvious health issues and pictures that come to mind when hearing about this STD. A term that we have come to hear and to an extent be frightened of ever since that one crazy sex-education teacher ,back in high school, told you it was basically a death sentence if you were to catch it. Now though it’s not necessarily a death sentence it definitely is not your average chicken pox. So what exactly does this have to do with pathology? Everything! Now let’s take a moment to mentally go back in time to the earliest record of this disease.
Syphilis is considered to be a Treponemal disease. Some symptoms include inflammatory changes in the tissue throughout the body. Usually the person will notice it around the site where the bacteria entered the body. It will then continue to change the soft tissue in the body and finally will start to affect the bones. So where exactly did this disease come from? Well there is no concrete answer. “The origin and antiquity of syphilis are among the greatest historical and scientific questions in the history of medicine” (George J. Armelegos, 2012). It is suggested that Columbus and his crew brought syphilis to the New World in 1493, but some even speculate that it originated in the Old World and simply went unrecognized until the early fifteenth century aka the Columbian and pre-Columbian hypotheses. To elaborate the Columbian hypothesis originated in New World and was carried to Europe by Columbus’s crew in 1493 which in effect caused the epidemic of 1500 to a population that had not been previously...

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In summary Syphilis is one of the oldest Treponemal diseases dating back to its early recording in the 15th century. Today there is still an ongoing debate on the origins of the disease. Some scholars speculating on the Columbus theory of bringing the disease to Europe versus the Pre-Columbus Theory stating the disease was indeed present in Europe before the voyage to the New World. There are three different stages of the syphilis disease and the third is where the manifestation of the disease on the human skeletal systems occurs. This disease, though less harsh than in medieval times is still prevalent today, found mostly in poorer underdeveloped countries. The continuing study of this disease can help with the prevalence of this disease in other countries and also help with the study of other diseases that have had an effect on humankind and/ or still do today.

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