STIs Flashcards
Define a sexually transmitted organism?
- A virus, bacteria, protozoan, insect or arthropod which can be spread by sexual contact
- Commensal
- Pathogen
What makes a sexually transmitted infection and disease?
STI: An infection by a pathogen which is sexually transmissible and which is unlikely to be transmitted by non-sexual means
STD: A disorder of structure or function caused by a sexually transmitted pathogen
Why are STIs so important?
1- Cause morbidity and mortality
2- They drain resources
Managing infertility due to chlamydia: cost of IVF.
Cost of HIV medication/ management of HIV related health conditions
Taking time off work to get your warts frozen.
3- They are common
• More than 1M new STIs acquired every day.
• More than 500M people have genital herpes
The number of STI diagnoses has increased over time, why do you think this is?
May be more cases, due to increasde number of parteners, anal sex and MSM
May be more diagnoses but not more cases as public and medical awareness increases as well as better tests
What models do we use to map spread of STIs?
Cores AND Assortative mixing
Chains and random mixing
How does assortative mixing work?
A subpopulation (“Core”) have sex with eachother but not the wider community
E.g. a minority ethnicity
Therefore you see a high prevalence amongst the core but without spreading to the wider community
E.g. HEP C infections amongst Hiv +VE MSM
How does random mixing work?
A very big population e.g. hetero men and women
Chains of sexual partners form rather than a tangled core and you get a disease of low prevalalence but a very wide dissemination
What questions are important when investigating a possible STI?
- Last Sexual Contact?
- Casual or regular partner?
- Nationality &gender of partner?
- Nature of sexual contact?
- Condom?
- Contraception?
- MSM?
- Injected drugs or had sex with someone who has?
- Medical treatment outside Uk?
- Involvement in sex industry?
How do we go about notifying patients partner’s of their possible STI?
Client referral (patient does the telling) Provider notification (NHS tells the contacts)
What further testing should be offered if an STI diagnosis is reached?
Other STI: HIV testing should be done as an STI is a risk factor for other STIs an HIV
What areas of health promotion should we educate STI patients on?
Condoms and what they do/dont prevent
Oral sex carries risks too
Alcohol and drug abuse
Venereal diseases organisms
- Syphilis (Treponema pallidum)
- Gonorrhoea (Neisseria gonorhoeae)
- Chancroid (Haemophilus ducreyi)
Other common ST organisms in the UK?
Bacteria
• Chlamydia trachomatis
• Klebsiella granulomatis
• Mycoplasma genitalium
Viruses • HSV • HIV • HPV • Molluscum contagiosum virus
Features of an STI?
- Transmissable
- Asymptomatic
- Always manageable. Not always curable
- Avoidable
Implications of an STI?
Partner notification
So hard to eradicate from a population. Need to prevent.
Treatment & prevention of complications
Primary prevention - education