STI Flashcards

1
Q

Trichomonas vaginalis

A

highly motile, flagellated protozoan parasite. Trichomoniasis is a STI Features: vaginal discharge: offensive, yellow/green, frothy, vulvovaginitis, strawberry cervix pH > 4.5 in men is usually asymptomatic but may cause urethritis Investigation: microscopy of a wet mount shows motile trophozoites Management: oral metronidazole for 5-7 days OR a one-off dose of 2g metronidazole

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2
Q

Bacterial vaginosis vs Trichomonas vaginalis

A
  • COMMON:‘offensive’ vaginal discharge.
    • Vaginal pH >4.5.
    • Treat with metronidazole
  • BV: thin, white discharge, clue cells on microscopy
  • TV: frothy, yellow-green discharge, vulvoginitis, strawberry cervix. Wet mount: motile trophozites
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3
Q

Chlamydia - Chlamydia trachomatis

A
  • Obligate intracellular parasite - gram negative non-motile.
  • Features: asymptomatic in around 70% of women and 50% of men women: cervicitis (discharge, bleeding), dysuria men: urethral discharge, dysuria.
  • Potential complications: epididymitis, PID, endometritis, increased incidence of ectopic pregnancies, infertility, reactive arthritis, perihepatitis (Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome)
  • Ix: urine (first void urine sample), vulvovaginal swab or cervical swab may be tested using the NAAT technique
    • for women: the vulvovaginal swab is first-line
    • for men: the urine test is first-line
  • Chlamydia testing should be carried out two weeks after a possible exposure
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4
Q

Chlamydia treatment

A
  • doxycycline 7/7 or azithromycin (single dose) If pregnant then azithromycin, erythromycin or amoxicillin may be used.
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5
Q

Human papilloma virus

A
  • HPV infects the keratinocytes of the skin and mucous membranes is carcinogenic.
  • There are dozens of strains of HPV.
    • 6 & 11: causes genital warts
    • 16 &18: linked to a variety of cancers, most notably cervical cancer
  • HPV infection is linked to: over 99.7% of cervical cancers around 85% of anal cancers around 50% of vulval and vaginal cancers around 20-30% of mouth and throat cancers
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6
Q

Syphilis - primary features

A

chancre - painless ulcer at the site of sexual contact local non-tender lymphadenopathy often not seen in women (the lesion may be on the cervix)

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7
Q

Syphilis - secondary features

A

systemic symptoms:

  • fevers, lymphadenopathy
  • rash on trunk, palms and soles
  • buccal ‘snail track’ ulcers (30%)
  • condylomata lata (painless, warty lesions on the genitalia )
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8
Q

Syphilis - tertiary features

A
  • gummas (granulomatous lesions of the skin and bones)
  • ascending aortic aneurysms
  • general paralysis of the insane, tabes dorsalis
  • Argyll-Robertson pupil
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9
Q

Genital ulcers painless

A
  • Chancre - syphilis (Treponema pallidum) -> ulcer with well define borders
  • Condyloma acuminata (HPV) -> skin colored papules, warts
  • Granuloma inguinale - donocanosis (klebsiella) -> sharply demarcated ulcer with beefy red granulation tissue
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10
Q

Genital ulcers painful

A
  • Genital herpes
  • Chancroid - haemophilus ducreyi
  • Lymphogranuloma venereum - chlamydia trachomatis
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11
Q

Enteric fever (typhoid/paratyhoid)

A
  • Spread via F-O route.
  • Aerobic, Gram-negative rods which are not normally present as commensals in the gut,
  • Presentation: initially systemic upset as above relative bradycardia abdominal pain, distension
  • constipation: although Salmonella is a recognised cause of diarrhoea, constipation is more common in typhoid
  • rose spots: present on the trunk in 40% of patients, and are more common in paratyphoid
  • Complications: OM (especially in sickle cell disease where Salmonella is one of the most common pathogens)
  • GI bleed/perforation meningitis cholecystitis chronic carriage
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12
Q

Lymphogranuloma venereum - Chlamydia trachomatis

A
  • Tropical sti can be caused by multiple serovars of Chlamydia Trachomatis.
  • The bacterium gains entry through breaches in the epithelial/mucous membranes, travelling through the lymphatics via macrophages to local nodes.
  • It is endemic to Africa, India, Caribbean, central America and southeast Asia.
  • Primary stage: Self-limiting painless genital ulcer at the site of inoculation 3-12 days later.
  • Secondary stage: Presents 1-6 months later with unilateral painful lymphadenitis/lymphangitis. The site of inoculation dictates symptomatology, if rectally, then tenesmus, proctocolitis, strictures and fistulas can ensue.
  • Cervicitis and urethritis are also common features.
  • Enlarged lymph nodes are known as buboes, they are often painful and can lead to thinning of the overlying skin causing abscesses.
  • Groove sign is separation inguinal nodes by the inguinal ligament and is characteristic of the disease.
  • Diagnosis is achieved by enzyme linked immunoassays or polymerase chain reaction of infected sample areas/pus.
  • Acute and convalescent sera can be used, but requires two samples 2 weeks apart.
  • Treatment involves Abx, either doxycycline or macrolides (azithromycin or erythromycin) and potential surgical drainage/aspiration of the buboes or abscesses.
  • Complications of the disease include: genital elephantiasis, hepatitis, infertility, pelvic inflammatory disease, arthritis and fitz hugh curtis syndrome.
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13
Q

Stages of Syphilis Infection

A
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14
Q
A
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