STI and BBV Passmed Flashcards

1
Q

Gonorrhoea is caused by the Gram-negative diplococcus Neisseria gonorrhoae.

How does it present differently in men and women?
What local complications can arise?

A

males: urethral discharge, dysuria
females: cervicitis e.g. leading to vaginal discharge

Local complications that may develop include urethral strictures, epididymitis and salpingitis

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2
Q

What is the major systemic complication of gonorrhea? How does it present?

A

Disseminated gonococcal infection (DGI)

Initially there may be a classic triad of symptoms: tenosynovitis, migratory polyarthritis and dermatitis.

Later complications include septic arthritis, endocarditis and perihepatitis (Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome)

It is the most common cause of septic arthritis in young adults

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3
Q

How is gonorrhea treated?

A

The first-line treatment is a single dose of IM ceftriaxone 1g
(But if the organism is sensitive to ciprofloxacin then oral ciprofloxacin 500mg should be given)

if ceftriaxone is refused (e.g. needle-phobic) then oral cefixime 400mg + oral azithromycin 2g should be used

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4
Q

All patients with gonorrhoea should have ‘test of cure’ due to high abx resistance. What is used for this?

A

with NAAT if asymptomatic or cultures if symptomatic

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5
Q

How can genital herpes be diagnosed?

A

clinical diagnosis or viral PCR swab from lesion

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6
Q

How should genital herpes in pregnancy be managed?

A

Elective C-section at term is advised if a primary attack of herpes occurs at greater than 28 weeks gestation (3rd trimester)
Oral aciclovir 400 mg TDS (three times daily) should be taken until delivery

Women with recurrent herpes who are pregnant should be treated with suppressive therapy and be advised that the risk of transmission to their baby is low

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7
Q

How is asymptomatic bacteriuria in pregnancy managed?

A

Immediate tx with abx

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8
Q

HIV seroconversion occurs about 3-12 weeks after initial infection. How does it present if symptomatic?

A

Like glandular fever

sore throat
lymphadenopathy
malaise, myalgia, arthralgia
diarrhoea
maculopapular rash and mouth ulcers
rarely meningoencephalitis

antibodies to HIV may not be present
HIV PCR and p24 antigen tests can confirm diagnosis

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9
Q

When should asymptomatic patients be screened for HIV?

A

4 weeks following potential exposure

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10
Q

What is the first line for HIV testing?

A

combination tests (HIV p24 antigen and HIV antibody) are now standard for the diagnosis and screening of HIV
- if the combined test is positive it should be repeated to confirm the diagnosis

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11
Q

Name some key AIDS defining illnesses

A

Kaposi’s sarcoma (caused by human herpes virus 8)
PCP
CMV
Candidiasis (oesophageal or bronchial)
Lymphoma
TB

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12
Q

How can HIV be monitored?

A

CD4 count ( 500-1200 is normal, under 200 is end stage /AIDS)

Viral Load

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13
Q

How should HIV be managed?

A

Antiretroviral therapy (ART) involves a combination of at least 3 drugs, typically 2 nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI) and either a protease inhibitor (PI) or a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI).

This combination both decreases viral replication but also reduces the risk of viral resistance emerging

patients should start ART as soon as they have been diagnosed, rather than waiting until a particular CD4 count

NRTI: zidovudine (AZT), abacavir, emtricitabine, didanosine, lamivudine, stavudine, zalcitabine, tenofovir

PI: indinavir, nelfinavir, ritonavir, saquinavir

NNRTI: nevirapine, efavirenz

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14
Q

What is a chancre?

A

Painless indurated lesion characteristic of the primary stage of syphilis

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15
Q

Most common complication of gonorrhoea?

A

Infertility secondary to PID

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16
Q

Most common cause of PID?

A

Chlamydia
(gonorrhoea second)

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17
Q

Common causes of genital ulcers?

A

painful: herpes much more common than chancroid
painless: syphilis more common than lymphogranuloma venereum

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18
Q

Most common cause of genital warts (90%)?

A

HPV 6 & 11

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19
Q

What is BV?

A

Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is an overgrowth of predominately anaerobic organisms e.g. Gardnerella vaginalis which = a fall in aerobic lactobacilli that produce lactic acid→ raised vaginal pH

Fishy/offensive discharge or can be asymptomatic

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20
Q

Risk factors for BV?

A

multiple sexual partners
excessive vaginal cleaning
recent abx
smoking
copper coil

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21
Q

How can BV be investigated?

A

vaginal pH testing from swab - above 4.5 = BV
vaginal swab for microscopy = clue cells

22
Q

How can BV be treated?

A

metronidazole orally or by vaginal gel

23
Q

Complications of BV?

A

increased risk of getting STIs

complications in pregnancy:
miscarriage
preterm delivery / PPROM
low birth weight
chorioamnionitis

24
Q

Man returns from trip abroad with maculopapular rash and flu-like illness→

A

think HIV seroconversion

25
Q

Tx for pubic lice (Phthirus pubis)?

A

malathion lotion or permethrin cream (insecticides)

Both should be applied to the whole body and washed off after 12 hours

repeat after a week

26
Q

Chlamydia is the most prevalent STI in the UK and is caused by Chlamydia trachomatis.

How does it present in men and women?
Investigation?
Tx?

A

women: cervicitis (discharge, bleeding), dysuria
men: urethral discharge, dysuria
often ASYMPTOMATIC

Investigation:
for women: the vulvovaginal swab is first-line
for men: the urine test is first-line
Chlamydia testing should be carried out two weeks after a possible exposure

Tx: doxycycline (7 day course)
if pregnant then azithromycin, erythromycin or amoxicillin may be used (azithromycin 1g stat preferable)

27
Q

Findings on examination of chlamydia?

A

pelvic or abdo tenderness
cervical motion tenderness
inflamed cervix
purulent discharge

28
Q

Complications of infection with chlamydia?

A

PID
chronic pelvic pain
infertility, ectopic pregnancy
conjunctivitis
lymphogranuloma venerum
reactive arthritis

29
Q

What is lymphogranuloma venerum ?

A

condition affecting lymphoid tissue around area infected w chlamydia

commonest in MSM

painless ulcer > lymphadenitis > proctitis

30
Q

Supportive management of genital herpes?

A

saline bathing
analgesia
topical anaesthetic agents e.g. lidocaine

31
Q

What PEP should be given post hep B and hep C exposure?

A

Hep B
known responder to vaccine : booster vaccine
non-repsonder to vaccine : hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG) and booster

Hep C
monthly PCR - if seroconversion then interferon +/- ribavirin

32
Q

What PEP should be given post HIV exposure?

A

low-risk incidents such as human bites don’t require post-exposure prophylaxis

high-risk incidents like needle stick injuries should be treated with a combo of oral antiretrovirals (e.g. Tenofovir, lopinavir and ritonavir) ASAP for 4 weeks with serological testing at 12 weeks following completion

33
Q

Where should swabs for chlamydia and gonorrhoea in women be taken from?

A

the vulvo-vaginal area (introitus)

34
Q

Fever, loin pain, nausea and vomiting →
Management?

A

acute pyelonephritis

obtain a MSU sample and then start on cefalexin for 14 days ( or IV ceftriaxone in hospital)

35
Q

Appropriate next step after needlestick injury?

A

Bleed and wash the wound

Ask a colleague to complete a risk assessment and take the patient’s blood as they will be able to be objective

Inform occupational health

36
Q

What is Trichomonas vaginalis?
Presentation?
Tx?

A

STI caused by flagellated protozoan parasite

vaginal discharge: offensive, yellow/green, frothy
strawberry cervix
pH > 4.5
in men is usually asymptomatic but may cause urethritis

tx: metronidazole for 5-7 days

37
Q

HIV + proctitis ?

A

Lymphogranuloma venereum

38
Q

most common non-immune cause of foetal hydrops in pregnancy? what is the immune cause?

A

Parvovirus B19

(Immune is Rh disease)

39
Q

Painless genital pustule → ulcer → painful inguinal lymphadenopathy → proctocolitis =

A

lymphogranuloma venereum
- caused by three serovars of Chlamydia trachomatis

40
Q

When should reinfection with syphilis be suspected?

A

if the RPR rises by 4-fold or more

41
Q

Urethritis in a male, negative for Gonorrhoea and Chlamydia →

A

?Mycoplasma genitalium

42
Q

Vaginal candidiasis or thrush refers to a vaginal yeast infection, most commonly with Candida albicans. What are the risk factors?

A

pregnancy
poorly controlled diabetes
immunosuppression
broad spectrum abx

43
Q

How does candidiasis present?

A

thick, white ‘cottage cheese’ discharge
vulval / vaginal itching or soreness
dyspareunia

44
Q

What pH would you expect in candidias?

A

<4.5 (as opposed to >4.5 in trichomonas or BV)

45
Q

How can candidiasis be treated?

A

antifungal cream e.g. clotrimazole (with applicator)
antifungal pessary e.g. clotrimazole
oral antifungal e.g. fluconazole

can use Canesten Duo (OTC tablet + cream)

46
Q

What is mycoplasma genitalium? How is it investigated and managed?

A

STI that causes non-gonococcal urethritis

Ix:
NAAT - first urine sample in men, vaginal swabs in women

Mx:
doxycycline 100mg BD for 7 days, then azithromycin

47
Q

Syphilis is a sexually transmitted infection caused by the spirochaete Treponema pallidum. What are the primary features?

A

chancre - painless ulcer at the site of sexual contact
local non-tender lymphadenopathy

48
Q

What are the secondary features of syphilis?

A

occurs 6-10 weeks after primary infection

systemic symptoms: fevers, lymphadenopathy
rash on trunk, palms and soles
buccal ‘snail track’ ulcers
condylomata lata (painless, warty lesions on the genitalia )

49
Q

What is Argyll-Robertson pupil?

A

tertiary feature of syphilis

suggests neurosyphilis

constricted pupil that accommodates when focusing on near objects but does not react to light

50
Q

How can syphilis be treated?

A

single dose IM benzathine benzylpencillin

51
Q

Risk factors for HIV?

A

multiple sexual partners, high-risk sexual practices such as ‘chemsex’, history of other STI
IVDU
from area with high HIV prevalence
MSM / female sexual contacts of MSM
trans women
sex workers
blood transfusions, transplants, or other risk-prone procedures in countries without rigorous procedures for HIV screening
occupational exposure such as a needle stick injury