STIs (7.1) Flashcards

1
Q

Outline the demographics of STIs

A
  • 42,000 diagnosed in 2017
  • Highest rate amongst 16-24 yo
  • Increase in cases in the last 10 years
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2
Q

Bacterial STIs: Gonorrhoea

Causative agent, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative agent: Neisseria gonorrhoeae

  • Virulent factors: Pilus, LPS endotoxin, resists phagocytosis

Symptoms: Develop 2-7 days after infection

  • 50 % females = asymptomatic
  • Purulent vaginal/urethral discharge
  • Dysuria
  • Neonatal gonococcal eye infection
  • PID
  • Untreated ▻infertility

Diagnosis

MC & S

Swab - warm charcoal enriched transport medium sent immediatley

NAAT

Treatment:

  • Single dose oral azithromycin
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3
Q

Bacterial STIs: Chlamydia

Causative agent, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative agent: Chlamydia trachomatis serotypes D - K

Life cycle: Elementary bodies (EB) → reticular bodies (RB) → EB → Release by cell lysis

Symptoms:

  • Asymptomatic in 50 % of males and 70 % of females
  • Females: vaginal discharge, dyspareunia, intramenstrual bleeding, abdominal pain, discomfort
  • Males: Urethral discharge, dyuria
  • Neonates: May cause blindness and increased risk of C trachomatis pneumonia

Diagnosis:

MC & S

NAAT and ELISA

Treatment:

Deoxycycline for 7 days (contraindicated in pregnancy)

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4
Q

Bacterial STIs: Syphilus

Causative agent, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative organism: Treponema pallidum (spirochete)

Symptoms:

Primary: 10 -90 days post infection. Small red oral/gential lesions. Chancre (PAINLESS lesions)

Secondary: 2 - 10 week after primary stage. Brown rash on palms and soles, fever, joint and muscle pain, lymphadenopathy, mucosal rash

Latent: Asymptomatic

Tertiary: Disfiguration, neuropathy, CVS abnormality, gumma

Diagnosis:

MC & S (Cannot be cultured in vitro)

Treatment:

Single dose of Penicillin G for primary, secondary and early latent

3 week course of penicillin G for later cases

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5
Q

Bacterial STIs: Chancroid

Causative agent, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative agent: Haemophilus ducreyi

Symptoms:

  • Painful genital ulcers (may look like herpes)
  • Lymphadenopathy

Diagnosis

MC & S

Treatment

Azithromycin/erythromycin

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6
Q

Bacterial STIs: Enteric bacterial urethritis

Causative agent, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative agent: Gut flora - enterobacteriaceae

♦ May be caused by poor personal hygiene or anal sex

Symptoms:

  • Dysuria
  • Urethral discharge

Diagnosis:

Treatment:

Mostly amoxicillin (treat according to sensitivity pattern)

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7
Q

Viral STIs: Herpes

Causative agent, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative agent: HSV I (oral) HSV 2 (genital)

Symptoms:

  • Genital itching
  • Genital lesions/fluid filled blisters
  • Fever
  • Muscle pain
  • Malaise

Diagnosis

Treatment:

Symptomatic relief

⋆ Suppressive acyclovir if pregnant

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8
Q

Viral STIs: Genital wart

Causative organism, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative agent: HPV types 6 and 11

  • HPV 16 and 18 are high risk → cervical cancer

Symptoms:

  • Itching or burning sensation
  • Raised ‘lumps’ with classic cauliflower appearance

Diagnosis:

Treatment:

Surgical/liquid nitrogen removal

Topical application of trichloroacetic acid

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9
Q

Viral STIs: HIV

Causative organism, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative agent: HIV

pg120 binds CD4 on T helper cells. Leads to immune symstem compromise

Symptoms:

  • Immune system compromise
  • May lead to AIDS
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10
Q

Viral STIs: Hepatitis

Causative agent, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative agent: Primarily Hepatitis B

May also be acquired through drug use, occupational hazards etc.

Symptoms:

  • Fatigue
  • Aching
  • High temperature
  • Jaundice
  • Pale coloured stools
  • Abdominal pain

Diagnosis:

Serology and Ig presence testing

Treatment:

Symptomatic relief

Anti-viral

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11
Q

Fungal STIs: Thrush

Causative agent, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative agent: Candida albicans

Symptoms:

  • Itching
  • Vaginal discharge

Diagnosis:

MC & S

Treatment:

Topical antifungal e.g. Clotrimazole

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12
Q

Protozoa STIs: Trichomonaisis

Causative organism, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative organism: Trichomonas vaginalis

Symptoms:

  • Vaginal/urethral discharge
  • Dysuria
  • Vaginitis

Diagnosis:

MC, NAAT

Treatment:

Metronidazole or tinidazole

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13
Q

Define Protozoa

A

A single celled eukaryote.

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14
Q

Protozoal STIs: Pubic Lice

Causative organism, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative organism: Crab louse Phthirus pubis

Symptoms:

  • Incubation period: 5 days - 1 week
  • Louse bites lead to a a hypersensitivity reaction and rash development

Diagnosis:

Microscopy

Treatment:

As per head lice

Malathion applied to dry hair

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15
Q

Protozoal STIs: Scabies

Causative organism, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment

A

Causative organism: Itch mite, Sarcoptes scabiei

Symptoms:

  • Symptoms seen after 3 - 6 weeks
  • Nocturnal pruritus

Diagnosis

  • Microscopy
  • NAAT

Treatment

As per head lice

Permethrin or malathion cream

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16
Q

List the most common bacterial, viral, fungal and protozoan STIs

A

Bacterial: Gonorrhoea, chlamydia, syphilis, chancroid, enteric bacterial urethritis

Viral: Herpes, genital warts, HIV, HBV

Fungus: Candidia Albicans

Protozoan: Trichomonasis, Pubic lice, Scabies

17
Q

Outline the demographics of STIs - Global and national

A

GLOBAL

  • > 1 million STIs acquired everyday
  • Trichomoniasis is most common

UK

  • 42,000 diagnosed 2017
  • 16-24 most prominent group
  • Chlamydia is the most common STI
  • Increased syphilis and gonorrhoea infections in the last 10 years
18
Q

List the impacts of STIs on population health

A
  • Mortality
  • HPV → Cervical, penile and throat cancer
  • HBV and HCV → Hepatic cancer
  • Placental transfer: Congenital deformity, blindness
  • Untreated STI → Infertility
19
Q

Relate national policies to STI service provision

A

WHO: Prevent, testing, care provision, treatment and chronic care

Public Health England provisions:

  • Local care provisions
  • Identify risk groups
  • Health promotion
  • Prevention and control

Expectation from STI services: Prompt and open, confidential, free treatment, counselling and support

20
Q

Outline the guidelines for partner notification

A
  • Under legal age - encourage to inform parents
  • Patient or provider may inform partners
21
Q

Describe the factors influencing the outcomes of STI management and prevention

A

STI management:

  • Emergence of anti-microbial strains
  • Compliance: Physical, psychological, socio-cultural (e.g. propaganda)

STI prevention:

  • Risk factors: Age and sex (females > risk due to > genital SA)
  • Behavioural: > 1 sexual partner, unprotected sex
  • Socio-cultural: Poverty, limited health care access, stigma
  • Screening
  • Vaccination: HPV and HBV
  • Education/awareness