A venereal sore or ulcer; specifically, the initial lesion of true syphilis, whether forming a distinct ulcer or not; -- called also hard chancre, indurated chancre, and Hunterian chancre.
The painless ulcer of primary syphilis that appears on the genitals.
A red, painless sore that is an early symptom of syphilis.
A skin lesion that develops at the primary site of a syphilis infection.
The primary syphilis lesion, occurring at the site of cutaneous or mucosal infection. It begins 10-30 days after infection and breaks down into an ulcer, healing slowly after 4 to 6 weeks.
a small hard painless nodule at the site of entry of a pathogen (as syphilis)
a highly infectious, painless, ulcerative lesion with well-defined raised borders and an indurated base
an ulcer that forms where a person was exposed
an ulcer that forms where the person was exposed
a red, painless although sometime tender, skin lesion that appears at the location where the bacteria enter the body
a small, painless red ulcer that develops during primary syphilis
a small red bump that appears at the site of infection from syphilis
a sore that shows up ten days to three months after sex with an infected person
A painless sore that has a thick, rubbery base and a defined edge; usually occurs on the genitals after the contraction of the sexually transmitted disease syphilis.
a skin ulceration that is a characteristic sign of syphilis.
Pronounced "shan-kar" a chancre is a painless bump usually found in the genital area during primary syphilis.
a small painless nodule on the skin.
a red, painless ulcer; a primary sore or lesion that forms at the site of entry of a microorganism (e.g., the spirochete bacterium that causes syphilis).
A sore that appears at the place where infection with syphilis takes place. The sore is generally not painful for women, however it can be very painful for men.
A hard, syphilitic primary ulcer, the first sign of syphilis, appearing approx. 2 to 3 weeks after infection. The ulcer begins as a painless lesion or papule that ulcerates. Occurs generally singly, but sometimes may be multiple.
A painless sore that appears during the first stage of syphilis.
a genital sore causes by syphilis infection
A painless sore on the skin or mucous membranes usually caused by syphilis.
Chancre refers to a venereal sore or ulcer; primary lesion of syphilis.
A round, hard, but painless sore.
The primary syphilis-related skin lesion that appears at the site of infection after an interval of 10 to 30 days. It manifests as a red, ulcerated skin lesion.
A chancre is a painless ulceration formed during the primary stage of syphilis. This infectious lesion forms approximately 21 days after the initial exposure to Treponema pallidum, the gram-negative spirochaete bacterium yielding syphilis. Chancres transmit the sexually transmissible disease of syphilis through direct physical contact.