Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8807456 Human Pathology 2018 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
While the incidence of syphilis has been persistently on the rise in the United States, hepatitis as a complication of early syphilis is relatively uncommon. We present a case of a 51-year-old homosexual, HIV-positive man who presented with acute cholestatic hepatitis with a predominantly elevated alkaline phosphatase. After laboratory studies and imaging were unrevealing, a liver biopsy was performed that showed expanded portal tracts with a predominantly lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate and prominent bile ductular proliferation with periductal neutrophils. Testing revealed a positive rapid plasma reagin, and a subsequent Warthin-Starry stain of the liver tissue demonstrated the presence of scattered spirochetes, confirmed as Treponema pallidum spirochetes on immunohistochemistry testing. These findings confirmed a diagnosis of syphilitic hepatitis. With therapy, symptoms and liver enzymes rapidly normalized. Given the persistent rise in syphilis incidence along with the morbidity and mortality associated with a missed diagnosis, keen suspicion, early identification, and treatment are crucial.
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