Neurosyphilis, a sexually transmitted disease that can cause neurologic damage, has become increasingly prevalent in the AIDS era. HIV carriers can contract neurosyphilis without the presence of other concurrent opportunistic infections. Because MR findings of neurosyphilis are seldom reported, we retrospectively reviewed and evaluated contrast-enhanced MR images of six young (average age, 33 years) HIV-positive men with high serum and CSF VDRL titers indicative of neurosyphilis. All six patients tested negative for concurrent opportunistic infections. Five patients had acute or subacute strokelike symptoms involving the basal ganglia or middle cerebral arteries; one had a parietal convexity mass mimicking meningioma with headache and ataxia. Contrast-enhanced MR images showed patchy enhancement involving the basal ganglia and middle cerebral artery territories in the first five patients and the convexity mass in the sixth patient. On the basis of brain biopsy, a convexity mass was diagnosed in the patient with syphilitic gumma. The imaging findings of the remaining five patients represented ischemic infarct caused by meningovascular syphilis. After penicillin treatment, serum and CSF VDRL titers decreased, and neurologic signs and symptoms improved in all six patients. A follow-up MR study in the patient with the gumma showed that the lesion resolved almost completely. In young HIV patients with stroke symptoms or a convexity mass, neurosyphilis should be considered. Contrast-enhanced MR can reveal the extent of involvement by neurosyphilis and should be used to facilitate diagnosis and proper treatment.