Syphilis: a primer

History

We’ve long read about syphilis – the “Great Pox” – in Victorian novels. The origin of syphilis is unclear, but many believe it was first brought to Europe in the 15th century by crewmen returning from Christopher Columbus’s expedition to North America. There was no treatment before penicillin, which was not widely used to treat syphilis until the late 1940s. Before penicillin, people became disfigured, crippled and blind – and the final stage is insanity. It was not so long ago that many suffered and died from syphilis. By 1947, penicillin was the common cure.

Detection

Early detection involves noticing a painless sore at the site of infection: in the mouth, around the asshole or on the penis. Get tested immediately and do nothing to pass it on until the test results are in and you’re treated. A sore commonly appears three weeks after infection and lasts one to three weeks. Because it’s painless it can go unnoticed. But this stage is called primary syphilis, and you are highly contagious.

Transmission

HIV-negative men trying to remain that way may use condoms to fuck all the time. But most suck dick raw. Even sliding your hand between someone’s ass cheeks, then jerking yourself off with the same hand can easily transmit syphilis if that butt has it. Syphilis makes HIV look hard to catch. But it does give you options when it comes to explaining how you got it. You need only admit to sucking a syphilis lollipop.

Treatment

Treatment for syphilis varies based on HIV status and how recently infection has occurred. If you’re HIV-negative, with primary or secondary syphilis, one treatment is considered enough. For those who are HIV-positive, up to three treatments may be necessary: one every week for three weeks.

Symptoms of advanced syphilis

Common symptoms of a secondary syphilis infection may include feeling generally unwell, with fatigue, fever, achy muscles, sore throat, headache, weight loss, loss of vision and mental confusion. Hair may fall out. Lymph nodes are commonly affected. An unsightly skin rash may develop everywhere on the body, including the penis, with raw-looking blisters on the palms of the hands and soles of the feet. These blisters can pass syphilis. Syphilis is called The Great Pretender because it resembles so many other infections and is often misdiagnosed. It spreads easily – orally, genitally or anally – when there is no barrier. And syphilis increases the risk of HIV transmission because of the open chancre or blisters.

Nancy Irwin (she/her) is a rebel femme who occasionally fights for justice. A biker, world traveller, handy-dyke, play party organizer and switch who plays well with all genders. She makes a living in green spaces.

Keep Reading

What you need need to know about gender-affirming care for youth

What sort of healthcare is available? Do parents have any say? Is the healthcare safe and effective?

Could this week’s Supreme Court abortion pill case affect gender-affirming care?

OPINION: The Comstock Act, a 150-year-old federal obscenity law, has advocates on edge

Raising the bar: How an Edmonton gym is making exercise accessible

Run by queer and trans professionals, Action Potential Fitness was created with LGBTQ2S+ clients in mind
The Ohio state legislature building with a blue star with stars and stripes behind it.

Ohio’s trans healthcare ban sets dangerous precedent ahead of 2024 election

ANALYSIS: Ohio has set a new precedent for using gubernatorial powers to indirectly outlaw transition—other states may follow