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.
CITATION STYLE
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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