Yaws is a chronic skin and bone infection caused by Treponema pallidum subspecies pertenue, a spirochete bacterium related to the syphilis pathogen but transmitted by direct skin contact rather than sexually. It almost exclusively affects children under 15 living in warm, humid, rural areas of West and Central Africa, the Pacific Islands, and Southeast Asia.

Yaws (ICD-10: A66) is a non-venereal, chronic granulomatous infection of skin, cartilage, and bone caused by Treponema pallidum subspecies pertenue. It is one of four endemic treponematoses alongside venereal syphilis (T. pallidum pallidum), bejel (T. pallidum endemicum), and pinta (T.

The key symptoms of Yaws are: A single painless raspberry-like papilloma (the mother yaw), 1-5 cm wide, appearing at the site of skin contact 9-90 days after exposure — most often on the leg, foot, or buttock., Multiple smaller papillomas spreading across the trunk and limbs weeks to months later, sometimes coalescing into ulcerated plaques., Painful thickening and cracking of the soles (plantar hyperkeratosis, called 'crab yaws'), making walking on the heels characteristic and the source of the historical name., Deep bone pain in the long bones (tibia, ulna, fingers), worse at night, due to periostitis and osteitis from spirochete invasion., Regional lymphadenopathy near the primary lesion, with rubbery non-tender nodes 1-2 cm in diameter., Saber-shaped bowing of the tibia (saber tibia) developing over years of untreated infection due to chronic periosteal thickening., Disfiguring destruction of the nose, palate, and central face called gangosa, occurring in late tertiary disease after 5-10 years untreated..
Diagnosis combines clinical recognition of a characteristic lesion in an endemic-area child with serologic confirmation. The WHO operational case definition for surveillance is: a person living in an endemic area with one or more typical papilloma or ulcer plus a positive rapid treponemal test. Direct dark-field microscopy of papilloma fluid can show motile spirochetes, but the test is logistically difficult in field settings. Serology is the practical mainstay. Two complementary tests are used: a treponemal test (rapid TPHA or DPP Syphilis Screen and Confirm) detects antibodies that persist for life and confirms exposure, and a non-treponemal test (RPR or VDRL) measures active disease and reverts to negative or low titer after successful treatment. A fourfold drop in RPR titer at 6 months is the cure marker. PCR testing for T. pallidum DNA on lesion swabs is the most specific tool and is the reference method in WHO eradication trials — it can also detect the macrolide-resistance 23S rRNA mutation that emerged after a 2018 outbreak in Papua New Guinea. Skeletal X-ray shows periosteal thickening of the tibia and ulna in advanced disease. The key clinical distinction is from venereal syphilis, which is serologically indistinguishable. In a child under 15 in an endemic area with no sexual history, positive treponemal serology essentially confirms yaws.
With timely treatment, the prognosis is excellent. A single oral dose of azithromycin cures over 95% of patients, lesions heal within 4-8 weeks, and RPR titers fall fourfold or more in over 90% of cured patients by 6 months. Permanent disfigurement and bone deformity occur only after 5-10 years of untreated infection and are now rare in surveillance-era countries. Sequelae of childhood untreated infection — saber tibia, gangosa, juxta-articular nodes — are essentially irreversible without reconstructive surgery, though active disease and pain resolve with antibiotics at any stage. Mortality from yaws itself is extremely low; the historical burden was almost entirely morbidity from disfigurement, school absence, and stigma. The 2018 emergence of azithromycin-resistant strains in Papua New Guinea is a concern but has not yet derailed eradication efforts, as benzathine penicillin remains universally effective.
Yaws is increasingly rare and most general clinicians outside endemic countries will never see a case. An infectious disease specialist or tropical medicine physician should evaluate suspected cases to confirm the diagnosis serologically, exclude syphilis (especially in adolescents), and arrange appropriate single-dose therapy. In endemic regions, primary care clinicians and community health workers manage the vast majority of cases under WHO protocols.
Find specialists →Primary lesions begin to flatten within 1-2 weeks of azithromycin and heal completely over 4-8 weeks. Secondary papillomata resolve over similar timeframes. Plantar hyperkeratosis improves over 8-12 weeks. Bone pain settles within 2-4 weeks. RPR titer takes 3-6 months to fall and 12 months to stabilize at the new lower level. Patients are no longer considered infectious within 24 hours of azithromycin or benzathine penicillin.
There are no specific exercise restrictions. Children with painful plantar hyperkeratosis should rest the soles until the lesions soften with treatment, typically 2-4 weeks. Once lesions heal, normal activity resumes without limitation.
In endemic countries, follow your national yaws eradication program's clinic referral pathway — these run regular mass drug administration days. In non-endemic countries, seek a hospital with an infectious diseases or tropical medicine service. Ensure they can perform both treponemal and non-treponemal serology and have access to PCR for confirmation. Travel medicine clinics are also a reasonable starting point for returning travelers with suspicious lesions.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 13, 2026
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