Gynae: STIs Flashcards

1
Q

STI Hx: What you ask about in your HxPC?

A
  • Explore HxPC: How long has this been going on for?
  • Key Sx:
  • Dyspareunia
  • Pelvic pain
  • Discharge: colour, odour, consistency, blood
  • IMB or PCB: volume/colour, LMP, duration, frequency, regularity, volume, associated pain?
  • Soreness, genital skin changes or ulceration
  • Systemic symptoms (fever, malaise, rash, weight loss, joint pain in Reiter’s syndrome)

-Male patient: testicular swelling or pain, skin lesions, urethral discharge, blood in urine

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2
Q

STI history taking: what should you ask about for sexual history (including high risk sexual behaviour) gynae Hx and background Hx?

A
  • Sexual history: number of partners in last 3 months, sex of partner (higher risk with bisexual and MSM partners), number of UPSI, contraception (barrier used?)
  • High risk sexual behaviour: HIV +ve partners, have they paid or been paid for sex, recreational drug use, Injectable drug use, aware of any partners who have injected drugs
  • Gynae Hx: PID/past infections, endometriosis, ectopics or ToPs, malignancy
  • Background Hx: up to date with smears, last time was tested? HPV vaccine
  • Contact tracing: attempt to gain information on partners in last 3 months to bring them in for testing
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3
Q

What examinations and investigations would you like to perform?

A
  • Abdominal exam
  • Speculum exam
  • Bi-manual exam
  • Triple swabs (NAAT testing): vulvo-vaginal (chlamydia), endocervical (gonorrhoea), high vaginal (BV/TV/Candida) + throat and rectal swabs. Can also do swab culture to diagnose gonorrhea
  • Serological testing: Hepatitis B, HIV and syphilis
  • Urine dipstick and MSU if +ve
  • Pregnancy test
  • If patient is systemically unwell or suspect PID/ectopic: TV US

*I have listed all possible ones: would pick and chose depending on situation and problem

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4
Q

Suggest 2 treatment regimens for chlamydia

A
  • Doxycycline 100mg PO BD for 7/7
  • Azithromycin 1mg PO stat dose
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5
Q

What further advice and follow up should you offer a patient who has had a recent chlamydia infection?

A
  • Avoid sexual/oral intercourse until both partners have taken treatment, until end of doxy treatment or 7 days after azithromycin treatment
  • If patient is under 25: should offer retesting in 3/12
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6
Q

Describe short and long term implications of untreated chlamydia infection or PID?

A
  • Short term: deep pain, discharge, PV bleed, systemically unwell patient
  • Long term: significantly increased risk of ectopic pregnancy (narrowing/scarring of fallopian tubes), tubo-ovarian abscess, chronic pelvic pain syndrome, Fitz-High-Curtis syndrome (perihepatitis)
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7
Q

What is differential for lower abdo pain in a young woman?

A
  • Ectopic pregnancy
  • Acute appaendicitis
  • Endometriosis
  • Ovarian cyst torsion or rupture
  • UTI
  • Functional pain
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8
Q

What is the treatment for PID?

A
  • Analgesia (paracetamol) and rest

IV therapy: recommended if more severe clinical disease (pyrexia above 38), signs of tubo-ovarian abscess or pelvic peritonitis):

  • IV ceftriaxone 2g OD + IV doxycycline 100mg BD (continue IV until 24 hours after clinical improvement and then switch to oral)
  • followed by oral doxycycline 100mg BD for 14 days + oral metronidazole 400mg BD

Outpatient regime:

  • 1st line: IM ceftriaxone 1g stat dose + oral doxycycline 100mg BD for 14 days + oral metronidazole 400mg BD for 14 days
  • 2nd Line outpatient regime: oral ofloxacin 400mg BD for 14 days + oral metronidazole 400mg BD for 14 days
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9
Q

Describe signs and symptoms of gonorrhea

A
  • Muculo-purulent discharge
  • Testicular/epididimal pain on examination or adnexal tenderness (females)
  • UTI
  • Endocervical infection: lower abdo pain (menorrhagia and IMB are rare in gonorrhoea)
  • Rectal discharge or peri-anal pain
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10
Q

What is the treatment for gonorrhea?

A
  • Ceftriaxone 1g IM stat dose
  • Leicester guidelines: Cefixime 400mg PO stat dose + azithromycin 1g PO stat (only if IM injection contra-indicated or refused)
  • Treatment for gonocococcal PID: Ceftriaxone 1g IM stat dose + regiment to treat PID (see cards above)
  • Epididymo-orchitis: ceftriaxone 500mg IM + doxycycline 100mg BD PO for 10-14 days
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11
Q

How can you distinguish between gonococcal urethritis and non-specific urethritis?

A
  • microscopy: if gonorrhea will show gram -ve diplcocci
  • Most NSU will be caused by chlamydia and small proportion by (mycoplasma genitalum, ureaplasma urealyticum, TV, HSV, HPV)
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12
Q

What are the types of HSV? How do you diagnose it?

A
  • Incubation period of 3-14, then lives in nerve fibre and sheds every few months/years
  • Type 1: normally causes cold sores but can also cause genital lesions – recurs every 1-2 years
  • Type 2 HSV: exclusively genital, has much higher yearly recurrence rate (6x/year)
  • Can make a clinical diagnosis (appearance/Hx) or do PCR of swabs from lesion (highly sensitive and type specific)
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13
Q

How do you manage HSV?

A
  • Do not wait for test results if believe it is HSV
  • Aciclovir: initial exposure (acyclovir 400mg TDS for 5 days)
  • Rest, analgesia, saline washing, strict infection control measures and avoid sexual contact
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14
Q

How do you manage HSV in pregnancy?

A
  • If mother gets recurrent infections: low risk pregnancy because Abs transfer to fetus – should start aciclovir from 30/52 until delivery to prevent outbreak.
  • Primary infection in last semester is very bad (plan for section)
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15
Q

What causes syphilis? Describe the natural Hx of untreated syphilis and treatment

A
  • Caused by Treponema pallidum – detected by serological testing
  • Primary infection (lasts 4-10 weeks and get appearance of chancre), secondary (lasts few weeks and get florid painless rashes and/or neuro or systemic sx), latent (can last 10-30 years) and tertiary (CV/neuro/Gumma body destruction)
  • Treatment: Stat dose Benzathine Penicillin G 2.4 MI IM
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16
Q

What examinations would you do for vaginal discharge?

A
  • Examination + vaginal pH
  • High vaginal swab: TV, Candida, trichomonas
  • Vulvo-vaginal swab: NAAT for gonorrhoea and C trachomatis
  • Endocervical swab: gonorrhoea culture
  • Pregnancy test
  • HSV swab of cervix for PCR
17
Q

What are the pathognomic clinical features of candida and how would you treat it?

A
  • PC: thick white discharge, no smell, some dyspareunia, presents post ABX
  • treatment: clotrimazole 500mg pessary PV stat (OTC), clotrimazole 1% (+/- hydrocortisone cream) BD for 2 weeks or Itraconazole 200mg PO BD for 1 day (2nd line)
18
Q

What is BV? Clinical features and precipants?

A
  • Most common cause of abnormal PV discharge in women of child-bearing age – due to imbalance of vaginal flora
  • Clinical features: off white frothy discharge (can be bloodstained), associated with itch/soreness, strawberry cervix/contact bleeding, dyspareunia, genital rash/lesion
  • Precipitants: over-washing, UPSI, receptive oral sex, perfumed bath products/douching/menstruation
19
Q

BV: how do you diagnose and treat it?

A
  • Diagnosis: +ve whiff test, clue cells on wet mount, raised pH, characteristic discharge and offensive fishy smell.
  • Treatment: metronidazole 400mg BD for 5 days (must caution against drinking alcohol)
20
Q

TV: what is it? How do you diagnose and treat it?

A
  • Classed as an STI – should notify partner(s)
  • Diagnosis: vulvo-vaginal swab -can do microscopy (can see flagellae moving), NAAT (most popuar and accurate) or wet mount
  • Treatment: metronidazole 400mg BD for 5-7 days or Metronidazole 2g PO stat dose