STD Flashcards
Describe the clinical presentations of STDs Identify the commonest bacterial, viral and parasitic causes of STDs Describe methods for diagnosing the common STDs
[bacterial std] Chlamydia
- caused by___
obligate intracellular bacteria (means that we cannot “grow” this organism on routine culture)
- Genital chlamydia infection is mostly ____ (symptomatic/asymptomatic)
Chlamydia
- caused by Chlamydia trachomatis obligate intracellular bacteria
(means that we cannot “grow” this organism on routine culture)
- Genital chlamydia infection is mostly asymptomatic
common genital chlyamidia in male and female respectively
male: urethritis, female:PID
Complication of chlamydia: PID in women (4), pregnant and newborns?
PID also in gonorrhea
infertility, tubo-ovarian abscess,
ectopic pregnancy,
chronic pelvic pain
Pregnant women:
Risk of premature rupture of membranes,
preterm delivery, low birth weight infants
Newborns:
C. trachomatis acquired through an infected
birth canal ⇒ neonatal conjunctivitis and
pneumonia
Chlamydia diagnosis [test+ specimen] MS no C as it is hard to grow
M/Test:
- Nucleic Acid Amplification
Test (NAAT, or, PCR)
* test of choice
* detects chlamydia DNA or RNA
* no routine culture
Specimen:
women: vaginal or endocervical swab
(specimen of choice)
OR first catch urine
men: first catch urine
(specimen of choice) OR
urethral swab
[bacterial std] Neisseria gonorrhoea
- (symptomatic/asymptomatic) carriage is major reservoir
- Clinical presentation in men and women very ____
Neisseria gonorrhoea
- Asymptomatic carriage is major reservoir
- Clinical presentation in men and women very different
Male vs female genital gonorrhea
Male: early and symptomatic eg urethritis and prostatitis
Female: asymptomatic
Extra-genital gonorrhea complications (3)
pharyngitis,
conjunctivitis,
disseminated gonococcal infection (bloodstream infection)
gonorrhea diagnosis [test+ specimen] MC no S
M/ test: NAAT/nucleic acid amplification test (or PCR)
Culture: swab or pus or urine. PCR does not need alive bacteria.
* cannot perform antibiotic susceptibility testing
[bacterial std] Syphilis 3 stages [FYI]
just know its pri, sec and tertiary. no need memorise
- painless sore (chancre) at inoculation
- dissemination
- CNS and CVS affected
Syphilis mode of transmission
- sexual / intimate contact
with infectious lesions
- blood transfusion - transplacental ⇒
congenital syphilis
syphilis diagnosis
- Serology (antibody detection)
- screening test:
Non-treponemal antibody testing e.g. VDRL, RPR - confirmatory test: Treponemal specific antibody testing e.g. Enzyme-immunoassay, TPPA
[viral STD] Human
Papilloma Virus (HPV): transmission mode and characteristics (3 types)
- direct skin-to-skin contact
- primary infection: may be asymptomatic, or mild symptoms. Genital warts or non-genital warts
- resolution of infection: may spontaneously resolve
- persistent infection: persistent infection with
high-risk - HPV types. Increases the risk of cancer e.g. cervical, anal, oro-pharyngeal