Genital symptoms [non STI] Flashcards

1
Q

What are the common presenting complaints in terms of genital symptoms?

A
  • Discharge from an oriface - either there is increased discharge, or from where there shouldnt be discharge. .
  • Pain from somewhere
  • Rashes - spots, redness
  • Lumps and swellings - on or in sub cut tissues.
  • Cuts, sores, ulcers - “ulcers”
  • Itching
  • Change in appearance
  • “sense of something not being right”
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2
Q

What are the potential causes of genital symptoms?

What are the aspects of each of the potential causative groups?

A

Micro-organisms involved

  • STD
    • Public and individual health problem
    • Treatable
    • Not always curable
  • Other microbial problem
    • Individual health problem
    • Treatable
    • Usually curable

Non-microbial

  • Individual health issue
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3
Q

What microbial conditions of the genitals are not regarded as STDs?

A
  • These are all casued by microbes.
  • Vulvovaginal candidosis
  • Bacterial vaginosis
  • Balanoposthitis - anaerobic/candidal
  • Tinea cruris
  • Erythrasma
  • Infected sebaceous glands
  • Impetigo
  • Cellulitis

(skin issues are very common problems - skin and microbial issues can affect the genitals just as easily as anywhere else in the body).

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4
Q

Outline Vulvovaginal candidosis.

A

Very common. Usually trivial but can become a problem.

  • 90% caused by Candida albicans, some can be caused by C. glabrata.
  • Usually the pathogens will be acquired from the bowel.
  • Often carriage is assymptomatic
    • But changes in the host’s envirnoment trigger pathogenicity.
  • If symptoms present - described as “Thrush”
    • _​_Itch
    • Discharge - classically thick, ‘cottage cheese’ but often just a report of increased amount.
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5
Q

When is Vulvovaginal Candidosis more likley to happen?

A
  • diabetes, oral steroids
  • immune suppression incl HIV
  • pregnancy
  • Reproductive age group
    • ( oestrogen…glycogen = food for yeast)
  • But many cases occur in women with no pre-disposing factors.
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6
Q

What are some of the examination findings that may be seen in vulvovaginal candidosis?

A
  • Fissuring
  • Erythema with satellite lesions (red spots away from the central red area)
  • Characteristic discharge - cottage cheese
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7
Q

What investigations can be done is suspected Vulvovaginal Candidosis?

A
  • Gram stained preparation
    • Low sensitivity - might look at an unrepresentative patch of vaginal and be falsely negative.
  • Culture - eg Sabourauud’s medium
    • Low specificity - yeast are often commensal
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8
Q

What is the treatment of choice in Vulvovaginal Candidosis?

A

Azole antifungals

  • Clotrimazole 500mg PV once
    • Plus Clotrimazole HC if vulvitis
  • Fluconazole 150mg PO once

If a resistant case - Determine species and sensitivites and treat accordingly.

Other managment

  • maintain skin - avoid irritants, treat dermatitis.
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9
Q

What is Bacterial Vaginosis?

Symptoms?

Cause?

A

Commonest cause of abnormal vaginal discharge

  • 10-40% of women at any time.

Symptoms:

  • Asymptomatic in 50%
  • watery grey/yellow ‘fishy’ discharge
  • may be worse after period / sex
  • sometimes sore/itch from dampness
  • Imbalance of bacteria rather than infection.
  • A biofilm problem – like dental caries
    • increased gardnerella / ureaplasma / mycoplasma /anaerobes
    • reduced lactobacilli
    • Sexually transmissibility controversial
    • Associated with vitamin D deficiency but just in black women
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10
Q

What are the problems that bacterial vaginosis can cause?

A
  • Usually the problems are quite trivial.
  • Some more important:
    • Associated with endometritis if uterine instrumentation/delivery
    • Associated with premature labour
    • Increases risk of HIV acquisition
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11
Q

How is bacterial vaginosis usually diagnosed?

A
  • Usually can be diagnosed through the characteristic history upon presentation. - If the symptoms described are typical then usually there are no investigations required.
  • Examination findings
    • Thin, homogenous discharge
  • If investigations are required - gram stained smear of vaginal discharge will do.
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12
Q

What are the treatments for Bacterial Vaginosis?

A

Often this settles on its own.

Pharmacological Treatments include.

  • Metronidazole
    • Oral (avoid alcohol consumption)
    • Vaginal gel
  • Clindamycin
    • Vaginal
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13
Q

What is Balanitis and Postitis?

A

Balanitis - inflammation of the glans penis.

Postitis - inflammation of the foreskin.

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14
Q

What is Zoon’s Balanitis?

A

AKA Plasma Cell Balanitis

  • Chronic inflammation to overgrowth of commensal organisms plus “foreskin malfunction”.
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15
Q

What are the causative organisms behind impetigo?

What causes erisipelas?

Why is this disease relevant in terms of the genitals?

A

Staph aureus

Staph pyogenes

Strep pyogenes

Any skin condition can also affect the genitals, not always an STD.

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16
Q

What causes “athletes groin”?

A

Dermatophytes causing tinea cruris.

17
Q

What are some of the potential causes of non microbial symptoms in the genitals?

A
  • Percieved problem only.
    • Normal findings, sensations
  • “Real” problems:
    • Dermatoses
    • Structural abnormalities
      • Congenital
      • Acquired
18
Q

What are some of the symtoms that can be explained under “perception of abnormality, but nil to find”?

A
  • Vaginal discharge
  • Urethral Discharge
  • Dysuria
  • Genital/Pelvic Discomfort
  • Rashes
  • Skin Lumps
  • Penis size, scrotal lumps, labial shape
    • Temporary
    • Permanent - body dysmorphia
19
Q

What are some lines of questioning that should be followed up on if symptoms are thought to be due to patients perception (nil to find)?

A
  • Regretted sexual encounter
  • Problems in life
  • Co-existing mental ill health - anxiety
  • When did they notice the problem?
  • When were things last normal?
    • Family illness
    • Friend with an illness
    • Media story
20
Q

What is the management approach to “nil to find” symptoms?

A
  • Acknowledge the perception - Don’t tell the person there is no symptom.
  • What do they think may be causing the symptom?
    • Cancer, infertility, HIV - try to outline these and reassure.
  • Variants of reassurance
    • Provide an alternative, benign explanation of symptoms.
    • Do tell tehm not to worry - doesnt help.
  • Discuss limitations of medical approach.
    • “here to exclude the bad stuff” - can’t find route of every symptom.
21
Q

What are some common benign presentations around the genitals that may bring people to the Dr?

A
  • Fox-Fordyce spots - normal sebaceous glands visible in the skin.
  • Vulval papillomatosis - cutaneous condition of the vulva, characterized by pink, asymptomatic, fine projections of the vestibular epithelium or labia minora.
  • Penile peraly papules - small dome-shaped to filiform skin-colored papules that typically are located on the sulcus or corona of the glans penis.
  • Tyson’s Glands - sebaceous glands
22
Q

What are some non infective but not “perception” issues of the gentials?

A
  • Pain syndromes – the ‘dynias’
  • Dermatoses - lichen sclerosis
  • Congenital - e.g. congenital cyst of the labia
  • Traumatic - such as rupture etc., torn frenulum etc.
  • Neoplastic
  • Manifestations of systemic disease