How to use in-sentence of “syphilis”:
– The first written records that talk about an outbreak of syphilis in Europe are from 1494-1495.
– In the 1930s, when the study started, syphilis was a very serious health problem in the United States.
– In the 1930s, people believed that syphilis affected people of different races in different ways.
– Over the 19th and 20th centuries, the symptoms of syphilis have become less severe.
– His health became poor and he suffered from syphilis as well as from depression.
– Some examples of STIs include chlamydia infection, syphilis and gonorrhoea.

Example sentences of “syphilis”:
– Before penicillin, the treatments used for syphilis were often even worse than the disease.
– Joplin died of syphilis in New York City on April 1, 1917.
– He died of syphilis in 1903.
– However, congenital syphilis is much more common in developing countries.
– Without treatment, 8% to 58% of people with syphilis die from the disease.
– After a few years, if people with syphilis do not get treated, they can have serious problems with the organs in their body.
– In countries that do not do this, getting syphilis from a blood transfusion is much more likely.
– In most developed countries, congenital syphilis is not common.
- Before penicillin, the treatments used for syphilis were often even worse than the disease.
- Joplin died of syphilis in New York City on April 1, 1917.
– In China and Russia, syphilis has gotten more common among Heterosexualityheterosexual people since the 1990s.
– Also, the bacteria that causes syphilis has become weaker.
– It is hard for doctors to diagnose syphilis just from the signs and symptoms that happen early on, because many diseases can cause skin sores and rashes.
– Congenital syphilis is spread from a mother to her fetus during pregnancy or childbirth.
– However, not everybody who is exposed to primary or secondary syphilis will get the disease.
– Around the place where syphilis entered the body, the lymph nodes usually get biggerKent M.E.
More in-sentence examples of “syphilis”:
– If babies with syphilis do not get treated, they can get “late congenital syphilis“, which has much more serious symptoms.
– If a person does not get treatment, syphilis will get worse.
– In 1905, two men named Fritz Schaudinn and Erich Hoffmann discovered that syphilis is caused by the “Treponema pallidum” bacteria.
– Ehrlich directed a research program which discovered the first treatment for syphilis which worked.
– Eventually, many people with tertiary syphilis will die if they do not get medical treatment.
– He died from syphilis and problems caused by his alcoholism at his family’s home in Malromé.
– Congenital syphilis in newborn babies can be prevented by testing mothers for syphilis during early pregnancy and treating women who are infected.
– It can also be caused by head injuries or conditions which affect the central nervous system, like syphilis and multiple sclerosis.Rhodri Hayward “euphoria” “The Oxford Companion to the Body”.
– He died of syphilis aged 50.
– Getting tested regularly helps prevent syphilis from being spread.
– The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment was a clinical study.
– By 1999, syphilis had infected about 12 million people.
– About 6.5% of people who do not get treated for syphilis get late neurosyphilis.
– A person can get syphilis if they get a blood transfusion from someone with the disease.
– Sometimes, the treatment for syphilis can cause a Adverse effect side effect called the Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction.
– Because of this, a single shot of penicillin – which will usually cure early syphilis – is not enough to cure neurosyphilis.
– If a person is tested and finds out that they have syphilis, they are more likely to get treatment, and will not accidentally spread syphilis to other people.
– This is partly because there are more treatments that work well, and if they are given early, syphilis does not get as bad.
– Siraisi, with April Shelton, eds., New World, Ancient Texts, 159-94 At other times in history, syphilis was also called the “Great Pox”.
– The study’s goal was to see how common syphilis was in this group.
– They were ordered to get treatment for syphilis before they could be taken into the military.
– If people with syphilis get treated early on, they can usually be cured without the disease causing damage that cannot be fixed.
– The other idea is called the “pre-Columbian hypothesis.” This hypothesis says that syphilis was already in Europe before Columbus, and people just did not realize that the disease existed.
– This study, now called the Tuskegee syphilis experiment, was very important in creating medical ethics.
- If babies with syphilis do not get treated, they can get "late congenital syphilis", which has much more serious symptoms.
- If a person does not get treatment, syphilis will get worse.
- In 1905, two men named Fritz Schaudinn and Erich Hoffmann discovered that syphilis is caused by the "Treponema pallidum" bacteria.
– A person gets syphilis by having sex with a person who has syphilis.
– Many people who have secondary syphilis say they never had a chancre during the primary stage.
– Scientists think syphilis is usually not spread by sharing needles.
– However, syphilis is still very dangerous.
– Two out of every three infants born with syphilis have no symptoms.
– This hypothesis says that when Christopher Columbus’s crew came back to Europe after exploring the “New World”, they brought syphilis back to Europe and spread the disease there.
– Secondary syphilis can cause many different symptoms.
– Gummatous syphilis can happen anywhere from one to 46 years after the person first got syphilis.
– By following these steps, in 2015, Cuba became the first country in the world to eradicate the spread of syphilis from Cuban mothers to their babies.
– About 10% of people who do not get treated for syphilis get cardiovascular syphilis.
– Antibiotic medication breaks open syphilis bacteria to kill them.
– A person cannot get syphilis from sitting on a toilet seat; using a hot tub or a swimming pool; sharing plates, cups, or Cutleryutensils; sharing clothing; or doing other regular daily activities.
– In the early 20th century, before antibiotics became available, Julius Wagner-Jauregg discovered that patients with syphilis could be treated by intentionally infecting them with malaria.
– The bacteria that cause tuberculosis or syphilis can also cause hepatitis; so can the parasite that causes malaria.
– There had been very few studies done on how syphilis affected people.
– About 15% of people who do not get treated for syphilis get gummatous syphilis.
– Manet died of syphilis in Paris at the age of 51.
– The Public Health Service started working on the Tuskegee syphilis experiment in 1932 during the Great Depression.
– Without treatment, one-third of people with syphilis get tertiary disease.
– Eventually – without treatment – syphilis infects the brain and causes death.
– Not having sexual contact with a person who has syphilis is one of the best ways to prevent getting syphilis.
