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Reviewed by the Faculty of Harvard Medical School
Yaws
  • What Is It?
  • Symptoms
  • Diagnosis
  • Expected Duration
  • Prevention
  • Treatment
  • When To Call a Professional
  • Prognosis
  • Additional Info
  • What Is It?

    Yaws is an infectious disease that affects the skin and bones. It's a tropical illness that was once common in West Africa, Indonesia, New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Haiti, Dominica, Peru, Colombia, Ecuador and parts of Brazil. In these countries, yaws most often affects children between the ages of 2 and 5, especially children who wear few clothes, have frequent skin injuries and live in areas of poor hygiene.

    During the 1950s, yaws was a common tropical illness, infecting 50 million to 100 million people. Since that time, the World Health Organization (WHO) has battled yaws in many tropical areas of the world. More than 160 million people have been examined in 46 countries, and more than 50 million cases of yaws have been treated with the antibiotic penicillin. As a result, the incidence of yaws declined dramatically worldwide. This disease always has been extremely rare in the United States.

    Yaws is caused by a subspecies of Treponema pallidum, the bacterium that causes syphilis, a sexually transmitted disease. However, yaws is not transmitted sexually. Also, unlike syphilis, yaws does not have the potential to cause long-term damage to the heart and cardiovascular system. Yaws almost always is transmitted by direct contact with infected skin. Yaws has three stages:

    Symptoms

    Symptoms of yaws include:

    Diagnosis

    Your doctor may suspect that you have yaws based on your travel history, your symptoms and the results of your physical examination. To confirm the diagnosis, he or she will order blood tests to check for evidence of an infection with the bacteria that cause yaws. Your doctor also may take a sample of tissue from a skin sore. This sample will be examined in a laboratory for T. pallidum bacteria.

    Expected Duration

    The mother yaw often heals quickly with treatment. Without treatment, it usually heals on its own within six months. Later, in second-stage and late yaws, rashes and lesions are more severe and last longer. Without treatment, the symptoms can return over many years.

    Prevention

    If you have come in close contact with someone who has yaws, your doctor may recommend that you receive penicillin or another antibiotic to prevent infection.

    Treatment

    People with yaws are usually treated with a single shot of penicillin (sold under many brand names), given in various doses depending on the age of the patient. If you are allergic to penicillin, your doctor may treat you with tetracycline hydrochloride (Achromycin, Panmycin, Tetracyn and others), which also has proven to be effective.

    When To Call a Professional

    Call your doctor if you have symptoms of yaws, especially if you have visited a tropical country.

    Prognosis

    Treatment of yaws is often successful. The disease is almost never fatal.

    Additional Info

    National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
    Office of Communications and Public Liaison
    6610 Rockledge Drive, MSC 6612
    Bethesda, MD 20892-6612
    Phone: 301-496-5717
    Toll-Free: 1-866-284-4107
    http://www.niaid.nih.gov/

    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
    1600 Clifton Road
    Atlanta, GA 30333
    Toll-Free: 1-800-232-4636
    TTY: 1-888-232-6348
    http://www.cdc.gov/

    Last updated September 18, 2008