Exam 4 - STIs Flashcards

1
Q

Congenital/neonatal infections:

______ can be transmitted transplacentally

A

Syphillis

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2
Q

Congenital/neonatal infections:

Opthalmia neonatorum result from what infections?

A

chlamydia and gonorrheal infections

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3
Q

Congenital/neonatal infections:

Neurologic impairment caused by what infections?

A

syphilis or herpes

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4
Q

Congenital/neonatal infections:

which infections are acquired at birth?

A

C. trachomatis
N. gonorrhoeae
herpes simplex virus

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5
Q

Gonorrhea Presentation:
in Men?

in Women?

A

Men: urethritis (purulent discharge and dysuria)

Women: usually asymptomatic (urethritis tho too)

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6
Q

Gram stain of Neisseria gonnorheae?

A

Gram NEGATIVE diplococci

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7
Q

Treating Gonnorheae:

what is the most common coexisting infection?

A

chlamydia

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8
Q

Treating Gonnorheae:

If negative for chlamydia — still treat for it?

A

yup still do dual therapy (can help prevent resistance!)

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9
Q

what is the drug of choice gonnorheae?

A

ceftriaxone

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10
Q

Treating Gonnorheae:

how to treat uncomplicated gonococcal infections?

A

Ceftriaxone IM one dose
Azithromycin 1 gram PO single dose

(doxycycline BID x7 days if azith allergy!)

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11
Q

High or Low resistance seen in gonorrhoeae?

FQs

A

high

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12
Q

High or Low resistance seen in gonorrhoeae?

Cefixime

A

low (getting lower but because being used less..)

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13
Q

High or Low resistance seen in gonorrhoeae?

Ceftriaxone

A

LOW! why we use it

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14
Q

High or Low resistance seen in gonorrhoeae?

Azithromycin

A

getting higher

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15
Q

Treating Gonnorheae:

how to treat uncomplicated gonococcal infections if ceftriaxone is not available?

A

cefixime PO single dose
PLUS
Azith PO single dose
(doxyccline BID x7)

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16
Q

Treating Gonnorheae:

how to treat uncomplicated gonococcal infections AND severe cephalosporin allergy?

A

Spectinomycin 2 g IM x1
or
Azithromycin 2 grams PO x1 PLUS gentamicin 240 mg IM x1

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17
Q

what bug causes syphilis?

A

treponema pallidum (spirochete)

18
Q

Clinical presentation of Syphilis:

Primary Syphilis?

A
Painless lesion (chancre -- dull/red/macule)
it will disappear spontaneously without treatment (in about 3 -6 weeks)
19
Q

Clinical presentation of Syphilis:

Secondary Syphilis?

A

Lesions are anywhere on body — PALMS OF HANDS AND SOLES OF FEET
and more systemic sxs

20
Q

Latent Syphilis:

Divided into ______ latent stage and ______ latent stage

A

early and late….

21
Q

Latent Syphilis:

Early or late — person is considered infectious?

A

early

22
Q

Latent Syphilis:

Early latent stage is defined as _____ from the onset of infections

A

1 year

23
Q

What are signs of Neurosyphilis?

A

headache
meningismus
increased CSF leukocyte count and protein

24
Q

Drug of choice for syphilis?

A

Penicillin G (parenteral)

25
Q

How to treat primary or secondary or tertiary syphilis?

A

BENZATHINE PCN IM x 1 dose

26
Q

How to treat early latent or late latent syphilis of unknown duration?

A

BENZATHINE PCN IM x 1 dose

27
Q

How to treat syphilis if penicillin allergic (non neurosyphilis)

A

Doxycycline BID x 28 days

or tetracycline 500 mg PO QID x 28 days

28
Q

How to treat neurosyphilis?

A

IV AQUEOUS PCN!!!! (NOT benzathine IV – ya kill em)

29
Q

How to treat pregnant patients with syphilis?

A

PCN!!! only!!

if allergic desensitize them and give them PCN

30
Q

what is Jarisch-herxheimer rxn

A

happens 2 - 4 hours after initiating therapy of PCN for syphilis— flu like symptoms
this is not a penicillin allergy!!

31
Q

Clinical Presentation for Chlamydia:
In males?

In females?

A

Males: urethritis stuff

Females: usually asymptomatic (can cause PID tho)

32
Q

________ is the most common cause of neonatal eye infection and afebrile interstitial pneumonia

A

Chlamydia

33
Q

Treatment for Chlamydia?

A

Azithromycin 1 gm PO single dose

Doxy BID x 7

34
Q

How to treat a pregnant women for Chlamydia?

A

Azithromycin 1 gm PO single dose

NOT DOXY!! no tetracyclines!!

35
Q

How to treat Mycoplasma genitalium?

A

Z-PAK!
(maybe Moxiflox too)

NO DOXY—super low cure rate

36
Q

Symptoms of a herpes infection?

A

Flu like symptoms!

Painful or itching etc

37
Q

Treatment of first clinical episode of genital herpes?

A

for 7 - 10 days

Acyclovir, Famiclovir, Valacyclovir

38
Q

Regimen for recurrent herpes??

Best to start in _____ or within ____ day(s)

A

Acyclovir, Famiclovir, Valacyclovir x 5 days

start in prodrome/start within 1 day of lesion

39
Q

Do daily suppressive therapy for herpes when patients have recurrences _______ times per year

A

6 times per year

40
Q

How to do suppressive therapy for pregnant women with genital herpes??

A

Start at 36 weeks gestation!

Acyclovir and Valacyclovir

41
Q

How to treat trichamonas?

A

metronidazole 2 g PO single dose (not best for dudes tho)

metronidazole 500 mg BID x 7 days

42
Q

Treatment options for pelvic inflammatory disease?

A

Clindamycin + Gentamicin (not best tho)
————————

IM/PO option
Ceftriaxone + Doxy +/- Metronidazole