Liver Cholestasis Secondary to Syphilis in an Immunocompetent Patient

  • Hussain N
  • Igbinedion S
  • Diaz R
  • et al.
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Abstract

Liver involvement is a known feature of secondary syphilis. The prevalence of hepatitis in secondary syphilis ranges broadly from 1 to 50%. We report a case of a 37-year-old man with type 1 diabetes mellitus and sickle cell trait presenting with jaundice and acute liver cholestasis. Abdominal ultrasound revealed mild hepatic fatty infiltration. RPR and Treponema pallidum IgG results were positive with a reflex titer of 1:64. Liver biopsy revealed chronic hepatitis with normal hepatic architecture, Kupffer cell hyperplasia, hepatic cholestasis, and ductal proliferation suggestive of syphilitic hepatitis.

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Hussain, N., Igbinedion, S. O., Diaz, R., Alexander, J. S., Boktor, M., & Knowles, K. (2018). Liver Cholestasis Secondary to Syphilis in an Immunocompetent Patient. Case Reports in Hepatology, 2018, 1–3. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/8645068

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