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Further support from an Irish psychiatric hospital for lack of value of routine serological tests for syphilis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2014
Abstract
Since the establishment of St. Brendan's Hospital in 1815 many changes have been seen in the pattern of psychiatric illness but none as dramatic as that of neurosyphilis. When Professor John Dunne first worked there in 1922, 20% of the patients suffered from general paralysis of the insane (G.P.I.) for which there was no cure. Around this time Wagner Von Jauregg – a Viennese physician, observed that patients who had suffered malaria during war did not suffer from G.P.I. He introduced malarial therapy successfully for which he received the Nobel Prize in 1927. Professor Dunne introduced this therapy into St. Brendan's after visiting Wagner Von Jauregg in Vienna. Unfortunately the mosquitos used would not bite! He resorted to injecting malarial infected blood. Only benign tertian malaria was effective and it is believed that the high temperatures induced – 40-41°C killed the spirochaete. This was followed by quinine treatment for malaria. The treatment was very successful but superceded in latter years by penicillin. The incidence of syphilis fell dramatically from 1942-1977, although recently it has been reported that it is rising in females and heterosexual males.
One hundred consecutive samples routinely tested for syphilis (using the Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) and Treponema Pallidum Haemagglutination (TPHA) test), between January and April 1988 were examined. Ninety-eight were negative for VDRL and TPHA. Two patients, both male, revealed evidence of previous infection i.e. VDRL neg, TPHA positive with Fluorescent Treponema Antibody tests (FTABS) reactive and FTA IGM negative in both cases. Neither of the two patients had any signs or symptoms suggestive of neurosyphilis.
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- Clinical and Brief Reports
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1989
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