Lecture 39: Genital ulcers and lesions Flashcards

1
Q

Insert slide one picture of the tongue. Describe the appearance of this tongue and the likely cause:

A

Bacterial overgrowth + ulceration following general illness, not eating, not drinking.

Not candida b/c these are not plaques.

It is likely herpes simplex virus (Primary infection can be quite bad)

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2
Q

How does herpes simplex infection change with recurrent infections?

A

Primary infections can be quite bad

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3
Q

What is used to treat syphilis?

A

benzathine penicillin

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4
Q

What are the probable diagnosis for genital ulcer presentations?

A

1st - Syphilis (Chancre, big)
2nd - Herpes (multiple small lesions)

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5
Q

Describe the herpes virus:

A
  • Enveloped, double stranded DNA virus, large viruses.
  • Latency and potential for reactivation
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6
Q

Describe the hang out place for latent herpes viruses:

A

HSV1 (cold sores), HSV2 (Genital ulcers), Chicken pox = Establish latency in sensory ganglia

EBV - Latency in B cells
CMV - Latency in myeloid cells

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7
Q

Does HSV1 exclusively cause cold sores?

A

Majority causes cold sores, some can cause genital herpes. Same for HSV2. (spectrum)

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8
Q

How many people are symptomatic with herpes?

A

20-50% of those infected have no primary illness.
- Can shed virus asymptomatically
- Lesions can be very minor and spread virus

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9
Q

What is used to treat HSV?

A

Acyclovir

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10
Q

How does acyclovir work?

A
  • Taken up by infected and non-infected cells
  • ONLY IN INFECTED CELLS, VIRAL thymidine kinase phosphorylates acyclovir activating it. (di or tri, = acyclo-guanosine-triphosphate)
  • AGT enters host nucleus and is incorporated into viral DNA chain, which jams viral DNA polymerase and stops replication
  • DNA polymerase is not affected as viral thymidine kinase is 3000x more active in phosphorylating acyclovir.
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11
Q

Compare and contrast acyclovir and valacyclovir?

A

Acyclovir, F = 15%, water soluble
Valacyclovir, F = 60%, not water soluble

Valacyclovir is much better to be absorbed through the brush border, metabolised into acyclovir by 1st pass metabolism

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12
Q

What are the potential complications of HSV1?

A

HSV1 encephalitis - Fever, seizures, coma (high mortality), , ICU + IV Acyclovir

(In immunocompromised people tissue necrosis can occur)

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13
Q

What are the potential complications of HSV2?

A

HSV2 meningitis - self limiting

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14
Q

How is HSV diagnosed?

A

Clinical: Cold sores, typical genital lesions

Swab - vesicle fluid or ulcer base -> PCR

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15
Q

What is tropnema pallidum and hows it spread? can it be grown?

A

Syphilis

Sexually

Cant be grown in a lab

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16
Q

Describe the timeline of a syphilis infection:

A

Sex -> 21 days incubation (bactereamia to organs) -> Primary syphilis (chancre, heals 3-6 weeks)

This can become either:

Latent syphilis: No current illness, abnormal serology, no hx treatment. (<4 years reinfection common, >4yrs reinfection rare)

Secondary syphilis: Disseminated (symptoms can occur in any organ), Rash (90%), fever, lymphadenopathy, can be meningitis…. up to 75% asymptomatic

Finally: Tertiary syphilis (can occur many years after)

17
Q

What are the types of tertiary syphillus:

A

Neurosyphillus: range of presentations. (dementia, pain etc, asympt chronic meningitis)

Cardiovascular syphilis: Destruction of the vaso vasorum of the aorta, hypertension and aneurysms

Gummatous syphilis: Granulomatous lumps in any organ (very rare)

18
Q

How is syphilis diagnosed?

A

Primary: Swab chancre, fluorescent microscopy

Other stages: Serology i.e
1. Enzyme immunoassay (sensitive, non-specific)
2. Specific antibody test (troponum pallidum particle agglutination)
3. Quantify IgM/IgG antibody (reactive plasma reagin)

19
Q

Why would you test for syphilis?

A
  1. Suspect disease
  2. Screening people at increased risk

i.e a person with chlamydia; a gay man with recent casual partners, pregnant women?

20
Q

Whats the main problem with HPV?

A

Oncogenesis; genital, head and neck

Some HPV cause cancer, some cause warts hence broad spectrum vaccine

21
Q

Describe the HPV vaccine:

A

The HPV vaccine is a virus like particle, essentially an empty shell of virus surface proteins

Protects against: HPV6,11,16,18,31,33,45,52,58….

Of which cause 90% of some cancers..