STI's Flashcards

1
Q

Gonorrhoea - What is it caused by?

A

Neisseria gonorrhoeae, inncubation period - 5/6 days.

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2
Q

Gonorrhoea - sy/sx men

A

10% have no sy, sx - thick profuse yellow discharge, dysuria. Rectal and pharyngeal infeciton is often asymptomatic

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3
Q

Gonorrhoea - sy/sx women

A

vaginal discharge, dysuria or intermenstrual/post-coital bleeding

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4
Q

Gonorrhoea - dx/ix

A

Nucleic Acid Amplification Test (NAAT) on urine or swab from an exposed site – vagina, rectum, throat. Could be self-obtained or clinician-obtained.
Gram stained smear from urethra/cervix/rectum in symptomatic people.
Culture of swab-obtained specimen from an exposed site using highly selective lysed blood agar in a 5% CO2 environment. Should be done for all confirmed cases to assess antibiotic sensitivity.

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5
Q

Gonorrhoea - tx

A

Ceftriaxone. Followup if tx is working after 2 weeks.

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6
Q

Gonorrhoea - complications

A

Male: Epididymitis, Female: Pelvic inflammatory disease. Bartholin’s abscess. [Gonococcal ophthalmia neonatorum.] Both: Acute monoarthritis usually elbow or shoulder.

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7
Q

Chlamydia - what is it caused by?

A

Chlamydia trachomatis, people under 25, sexually active teenage women

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8
Q

Chlamydia - sy/sx men

A

> 70% asymptomatic, sx- Slight watery discharge, dysuria,

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9
Q

Chlamydia - sy/sx women

A

> 80% asymptomatic, vaginal discharge, dysuria, intermenstrual/post-coital bleeding. Both men and women may get Conjunctivitis

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10
Q

Chlamydia - dx/ix

A

First void urine in men. Self-taken or clinician-taken swab from cervix, urethra, rectum as appropriate.
All specimens tested using a NAAT

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11
Q

Chlamydia - Tx

A

Doxycycline 100mg for 1 week (if pregnant give Azithromycin once), then followup at 3-12 months

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12
Q

Chlamydia - complications

A

Men Epididymitis. Women: PID and hence ectopic pregnancy, pelvic pain and infertility. Probably only ~1% of women who get chlamydia will develop a problem with their fertility Both: Reactive arthritis/ Reiter’s syndrome – urethritis/cervicitis + conjunctivitis + arthritis

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13
Q

Herpes - what is it caused by?

A

HSV1 and 2 (inncubation period of 5 days to months, some may nnever get symptoms), very common, HSV2 is an important cofactor for HIV transmission

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14
Q

Herpes - sy/sx

A

80% have no symptoms. The rest have recurring symptoms – monthly, annually. Burning/itching then blistering then tender ulceration. Tender inguinal lymphadenopathy. Flu-like symptoms. Dysuria, Neuralgic pain in back, pelvis and legs,

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15
Q

Herpes - dx/ix

A

clinical, swab from lesionn then PCR

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16
Q

Herpes - tx

A

Primary outbreak: Aciclovir: various regimens – eg 400mg tds for 5 days, Lidocaine ointment.
Infrequent recurrences: Lidocaine ointment. Aciclovir 1.2g once daily until symptoms gone (1-3 days)
Frequent recurrences: Aciclovir 400bd long-term as suppression.

17
Q

Herpes - complications

A

Autonomic neuropathy, (urinary retention), neonatal infection, secondary infection.

18
Q

Syphilis - what is it caused by?

A

Treponema pallidum subspecies pallidum, >90% MSM

19
Q

Syphilis- sy/sx

A

Primary Local ulcer (CHANCRE), Secondary Rash, mucosal ulceration, neuro symptoms, patchy alopecia, other symptoms.
Early latent no symptoms but <2years since caught. Late latent no symptoms but >2 years since caught. Tertiary Neurological, cardiovascular or gummatous – skin lesions, (all v rare).

20
Q

Syphilis - dx/ix

A

Clinical signs, urethral swab then TPPA - Serology for TP IgGEIA, and RPR, PCR on sample from an ulcer

21
Q

Syphilis - tx

A

Early (<2 yrs and no neurological involvement): Benzathine penicillin 2.4 MU im once Or Doxycycline 100mg bd po 2 weeks
Late (>2 years) and no neurological involvement: Benzathine penicillin 2.4MU im weekly for 3 doses, Doxycycline 100mg bd po 28 days

22
Q

Syphilis - complications

A

neurosyphilis – cranial nerve palsies are commonest, cardiac or aortal involvement.

23
Q

infectious diseases wihich may be accquired from abroad on a buisniess trip…

A

HIV, HCV, chlamydia, genital or oral HSV, HBV, anal genital warts.

24
Q

Trichomoniasis - What is it caused by?

A

Trichomonas vaginalis, more common in middle aged women

25
Q

Trichomoniasis - sy/sx

A

Men: usually asymptomatic, Women: 10-30% asymptomatic, Profuse thin vaginal discharge - greenish, frothy and foul smelling. Vulvitis.

26
Q

Trichomoniasis - dx/ix

A

PCR on a vaginal swab. NB not validated on urine yet so no test for men.
Point of Care - Microscopy of wet preparation of vaginal discharge.

27
Q

Trichomoniasis - tx

A

Metronidazole 400mg po bd for 5 days or 2g single dose.

28
Q

Trichomoniasis - complications

A

miscarriage, preterm labour

29
Q

Anogenital warts - what is it caused by?

A

Human Papilloma Virus types 6 and 11 (and occasionally type 1)

30
Q

Anogenital warts - sy/sx

A

Lumps with a surface texture of a small cauliflower. Occasionally itching or bleeding especially if perianal or intraurethral.

31
Q

Anogenital warts - dx/ix

A

Appearance. Biopsy if unusual – to exclude intraepithelial neoplasia, but this is rarely needed.

32
Q

Anogenital warts - tx

A

Podophyllotoxin (brands warticon and condyline), imiquimod (brand Aldara). Both home treatments, Others – cryotherapy, Bulky warts – diathermy, scissor removal.

33
Q

Give examples of sexually transmitted bacteria, viruses and parasites

A

Bacteria - Chlamydia trachomatis, Klebsiella granulomatis, Mycoplasma genitalium
Viruses - HSV, HIV, HPV, Molluscum contagiosum virus
Parasites - Pthirus pubis, Sarcoptes scabei, Trichomonas vaginalis

34
Q

what are important features of STI’s

A

They’re transmissible, partner notification important, Asymptomatic most of the time, symptoms and screening, All manageable but not always curable, treatment/prevention of complications, Avoidable, primary prevention = education

35
Q

sy in general from sti’s

A

Morbidity, psychological distress and unpleasant symptoms: Ulceration, Lumps, Urethritis, Discharge, Rashes
Systemic symptoms: Fever, Rash, Lymphadenopathy, Malaise, Infertility