Infection (Gynae): Gonorrhoea, HPV, Syphilis Flashcards

1
Q

What is Gonorrhoea?

A

Purulent infection of mucous membranes caused by Nesseria Ghonorreae.

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2
Q

What is the aetiology of Gonorrhoea?

A

Sexual contact 75%, vertical (neonatal conjunctivitis). RF: unprotected sex, multiple partners, presence of other STI, HIV, <25y.

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3
Q

What is the history/ exam of Gonorrhoea?

A

MANY PATIENTS ARE ASYMPTOMATIC! 50%.

PV discharge, IMB, PCB, dysuria, dyspareunia. Lower abdo pain.

· Abdomen: lower abdo tenderness

· Speculum: Mucopurulent endocervical discharge, easy to indunce endocervical bleeding.

· Vaginal: pelvic tenderness, cervical excitation

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4
Q

What is the pathology of Gonorrhoea?

A

Highly infectious G- diplococcus affecting mucous membranes.

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5
Q

What investigations do you do for Gonorrhoea?

A

Microbiology: endocervical swab/ HVS. Culture of specimen with DNA probe and PCR assay.

Patients with Disseminated Gonococcal Infection require culture form all mucosal sites and blod cultures.

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6
Q

What is the management of Gonorrhoea?

A

Abx: cephalosporin, penicillin, tetracycline or quinolone single dose.

Advice to treat for both Ghonorrea and coinfection with Chlamydia.

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7
Q

What are the complications/ prognosis of Gonorrhoea?

A

PID, pain, infertility, ectopic, conjunctivitis, Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome (perihepatitis with Ngon infection), high susceptibility to HIV infection,

Dissemination of disease (DGI),-> fever, skin rash, septic arthritis, arthralgia, meningitis, endocarditis.

Vertical transmission: OPTHALMIA NEONATORUM (bilateral conjunctivitis)

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8
Q

What is HPV?

A

Epithelial infection and tumor formation in skin and mucous membranes. Anogenital, congenital, or epidermodysplasia verruciformis.

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9
Q

What is the aetiology of HPV?

A

Physical and sezual contact, RF: multiple, unprotected, immunosuppress, smoking.

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10
Q

What is the epidemiology of HPV?

A

50% of sexually active adults have HPV.

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11
Q

What is the history/ exam of HPV?

A

Warts on genitals, vulva, vagina, anus and cervix. Generally painless but may itch, bleed and become inflamed.

OE pink, red, browh papules. Single or multiple. Over time display a typical warty appearance.

4 types: small papular, cauliflower like, keratotoc, and flat papules (usually cervix)

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12
Q

What is the pathology of HPV?

A

dsDNA virus highly infectious. Infects epithelial cells (skin, anogenital, respiratory) causing abnormal multiplication. 100 known subtypes.

Low risk tipes (6/11) cause benign genital warts. High risk types (16/18) cause CIN, Vin and incubation period varies form weeks to years.

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13
Q

What investigations do you do for HPV?

A

Clinical, acetic acid and examination of lesions. Biopsy of lesion (histology)

CIN: Pap smear cervical to determine whether Metaplasia, HPV DNA test.

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14
Q

What is the management of HPV?

A

Topical on non mucosal surfaces: imiquimoid and IFNa. NOT IN PREGNANCY!

Otherwise, topical 5FU.

Cryosurgery, E&C and excision are also options.

Vaccinations for 6/11/16/18.

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15
Q

What are the complications/ prognosis of HPV?

A

Possible development into: anorectal cancer, cervical cancer (HPV 16/18). Aesthetic.

In the neonate, laryngeal papillomatosis (vertical transmission

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16
Q

What is Syphilis?

A

Infectious venereal disease caused bt Treponema pallidum sphirocete.

17
Q

What is the aetiology of Syphilis?

A

Transmitted by sexual contact with infectious lesions, from mother to fetus in utero, blood, or breaks in the skin contact.

Risk factors: MSM, HIV, multiple partners.

4 stages: primary, secondary, latent and tertiary.

18
Q

What is the epidemiology of Syphilis?

A

4/100k n US after penicillin induction. MSM account for 87%.

Most common during age of peak sexual activity. (25/29)

19
Q

What is the history/ exam of Syphilis?

A

· Primary:

o 10-90 days after infection.

o Primary chancre: solitary, raised, firm red papules several cm in diameter. Ulcerative crater, with elevated edges. Heals in 4wk.

· Secondary:

o Cutaneous eruption 2-10wk after primary chancre. May be subtle.

o Mucocutaneous nonpurpuric and symmetrical rash. Nontender lymphadenopathy. Mild constitutional symptoms also arise.

· Latent: No symptoms, but still infective up to 1 year into latency.

· Tertiary syphillis:

o Slowly progressive and affecting any organ. May be accompanied by granulomatous superficial lesions.

o Manifests as paraesthesia, impaited balance, incontinence, impotence, focal neurological findings, dementia, chest/back/pain aortic aneurysms

· Congenital syphillis in first 2y of life.

o Rhinitis, soon followed by cutaneous lesions.

o Hearing and language development delay.

o Facial and dental abnormalities.

20
Q

What is the pathology of Syphilis?

A

T pallidum survives only briefly outside body. Requires direct contact for transmission. Inbades abrased skin or mucous membranes and dissemintes via blood or lymph.

21
Q

What investigations do you do for Syphilis?

A

Blood: PRP and VRDL. Can give false+ with EBV, lymphoma, TB, malaria. Combine with TPHA and FTA-ABS.

Microscopy of fluid from priamry or secondary lesions.

22
Q

What is the management of Syphilis?

A

Abx: Penicillin G (first) or oral tetracycline doxocycline (NOT pregnant). F/U at 1,2,3,12 mo and then 6mo until seronegative. Contact trace, require full STI screen.

23
Q

What are the complications/ prognosis of Syphilis?

A

CVs, neuro disease. Jasrisch-Herxheimer reaction (febrile reaction to tx with fever, chills and myalgia), congenital syphillis, HIV susceptibility.

Excellent prognosis with tx in primary or secondary stage.