Management of gynecological infections Flashcards

1
Q

What are three main categories for infection of the female pelvis

A

Pregnancy, post-surgical infections, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID)

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2
Q

What are the three classifications of infections related to pregnancy

A

Intrapartum, postpartum, or postabortal infections

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3
Q

What is an intrapartum infection, when does it usually occur

A

amniotic fluid/fetal membranes become infected due to normal flora ascending into the intrauterine cavity after membrane rupture, less than 37 weeks

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4
Q

What are the organisms that usually cause intrapartum infections

A

Beta-Streptococci, E. coli, Mycoplasma spp. and Prevotella Spp

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5
Q

T/F: Intrapartum infections should be treated before delivery to make sure the pathogen does not become systemic

A

True

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6
Q

What antibiotics are given to treat a intrapartum infection

A

Ampicillin and gentamicin

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7
Q

What part of the uterus in infected after birth causing a postpartum infection

A

The endometrium is infected by normal flora

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8
Q

What are the risk factors for endomyometritis

A

Duration of labor or rupture of membranes, bacterial vaginosis, number of vaginal exams, internal fetal monitoring

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9
Q

What organisms cause endomyometritis

A

E. coli, Beta-stretococcous, C. vagininalis, prevotella

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10
Q

What are the first line antibiotics used to treat endomyometritis, alternatives

A

Clindamycin and gentamicin, amp/sulb, pip/tazo, cefoxitin. carbapenenms

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11
Q

What causes surgical site infections in women

A

Surgical site is contaminated with vaginal flora

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12
Q

What organisms usually cause a surgical site infection in women

A

beta-strep, E. coli, prevotella, G. vaginalis

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13
Q

What are classifications for surgical site infections in women

A

cuff cellulitis, pelvic cellulitis and pelvic abscess

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14
Q

What are key diffenences in the 3 types of surgical site infections

A

Cuff cellultis: minimal discahe with lower abdominal pain
Pelvic cellultiis: Fever tenderness with patients appearing sick
Pelvic Abscess: spread of infection deep into abdominal tissue that may require antibiotics and surgical drainage

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15
Q

What is a key way to prevent a surgical site infection

A

use chlorhexidine or providone iodine around the skin and vagina area

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16
Q

What are other risk factors for getting a surgical site infection

A

Not using systemic antimicrobial prophylaxis, blood loss, prolonged surgery (greater than 2 hours), blood transfusion, using staples instead of sutures

17
Q

What are the antibiotics that are suggested if a patient has cuff cellulitis

A

Augmentin 875 mg BID OR Cirprofloxacin 500 mg BID plus Flagyl 500 mg BID

18
Q

T/F: For pelvic cellulitis and pelvic abscess the length of treatment should only be 7 days with a start of IV antibiotics

A

False: For pelvic cellulitis and pelvic abscess the length of treatment should be 14 days with IV antibiotics starting off

19
Q

If a patient has pelvic abscess what will determine whether or not there is drainage of a mass

A

Abscess is greater than 8 cm or abscess is less than 8 cm but there is not improvement after using antibiotic therapy

20
Q

What is the most common cause of vaginal discharge, what causes this

A

Bacterial vaginosis. due to alteration of normal vaginal flora

21
Q

What organism works to keep normal flora in check, what can cause their decline

A

Lactobacillus, G. vaginalis predomniates, vaginal anaerobes (prevotella, bacterocides, peptosteptococcus)

22
Q

What are symptoms of bacterial vaginosis

A

Homogenous gray- white discharge, pH greater than 4.5, coccobacillary cells adhered to vaginal epithelium

23
Q

What are risk factors of bacterial vaginosis

A

Douching, smoking, early age sexual intercours, multiple sex partners, woman/woman sex

24
Q

T/F: Bacterial vaginosis is NOT and STD/STI

A

True

25
Q

What are the treatment options for baterial vaginosis

A

Metronidazole 500 mg BID for 7 days, Metronidazole 0.75 gel every day for 5 days, Clindamycin 300 mg BID for 7 days

26
Q

What is pelvic inflammatory disease

A

Infection/ inflammation of the upper genital tract (reproductive) and pelvic organs

27
Q

What are two pathogens that MUST be covered if pelvic inflammatory disease is present

A

Gonorrheae and chlamydia

28
Q

What are the risk factors for PID

A

Young females from early teens to early 20s, multiple sex partners, substance abuse, douching

29
Q

When do symptoms for PID develop

A

During or after the menstrual cycle

30
Q

How long are patient with PID treated, if given IV antibiotics when should a switch to oral happen

A

14 days, 24 to 48 hours