Lecture 7 Part 2 - Sexually Transmitted Infections

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65 Terms

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what causes chlamydia?

chlamydia trachomatis

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symptoms of chlamydia

urethritis, cervicitis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID, complication)

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are symptoms typically present with chlamydia?

no, and this is important because of transmission risk

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what is used to diagnose chlamydia?

first catch urine or swab specimen

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NAAT for chlamydia

highly sensitive and specific chlamydia test in which a patient can self collect their urine for testing

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what does NAAT detect?

urethritis

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what is first line for chlamydia?

doxycycline 100 mg PO BID for 7 days

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alternative option for chlamydia

azithromycin 1g PO once

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pros of using azithromycin for chlamydia

one dose, safe in pregnancy

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cons of using azithromycin for chlamydia

inferior to doxycycline

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what is expedited partner therapy (EPT) for chlamydia

treatment for the partner of the diagnosed individual

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what causes gonorrhea?

Neisseria gonorrhoeae

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gonorrhea manifestations in men

urethritis and epididymitis

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gonorrhea manifestations in women

urethritis and cervicitis

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what are serious complications of gonorrhea?

pharyngitis, proctitis, disseminated infection

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how do we diagnose gonorrhea?

culture ideal (preferred over NAAT)

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why is a culture preferred for gonorrhea?

because every drug that has been used for gonorrhea has shown resistance eventually

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treatment for uncomplicated gonorrhea

ceftriaxone 500 mg IM once (if < 150 kg)

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alternative option for uncomplicated gonorrhea (cephalosporin allergy)

gentamicin IM once + azithromycin PO once

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EPT for gonorrhea

cefixime 800 mg PO once (we try not to because of cross resistance with ceftriaxone)

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what do we use for gonorrhea if chlamydia is not excluded by testing?

doxycycline 100 mg BID for 7 days

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what do we use for gonorrhea if a pharyngeal infection has occurred?

test of cure recommended (a lot of failed therapies)

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what do we use for serious complications of gonorrhea (gonorrheal arthritis, meningitis, endocarditis)?

ceftriaxone at HIGHER doses for LONGER time

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duration of ceftriaxone therapy for gonorrheal arthritis and endocarditis

a -> >/= 7 days

e -> >/= 4 weeks

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what is pelvic inflammatory disease a complication of?

C. Trachomatis and N. Gonorrhoeae, but can also be due to normal anaerobic flora

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clinical presentation of PID

abnormal bleeding, dyspareunia, vaginal discharge

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what does PID cause?

infertility, chronic pelvic pain, ectopic pregnancy

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diagnosis of PID

hard to diagnose, based on clinical findings

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who should empiric PID treatment be started in?

sexually active young women and other women at risk of STDs with pelvic/lower abdominal pain, findings on pelvic exam

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treatment of PID

ceftriaxone IM once + doxycycline PO 14 days + metronidazole PO 14 days

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what causes nongonococcal urethritis?

many different bacteria and unknown pathologies

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what is the most common cause of nongonococcal urethritis?

C. Trachomatis

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clinical presentation of nongonococcal urethritis

urethral discharge, irritation, dysuria

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what is genital herpes?

chronic, life long viral infection that is often asymptomatic

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how is genital herpes reactivated?

immunologic effects and stress (latent infection)

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clinical presentation of genital herpes

multiple vesicular lesions (may cause more severe disease)

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how is genital herpes diagnosed?

PCR (preferred over cultures as it is more sensitive for HSV DNA)

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when are serologic tests used for genital herpes?

if recurrence of HSV, signs or partner diagnosed and PCR comes back negative

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treatment for genital herpes

famciclovir and valacyclovir, acyclovir (not preferred) for 1-5 days depending on agent

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how long is the first clinical episode of genital herpes treated vs recurrent episode?

first episode treated longer

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what are the different ways of treating genital herpes?

episodic or suppressive/everyday

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severe genital herpes

CNS complications, disseminated infection, pneumonitis, hepatitis

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what does severe genital herpes require?

IV acyclovir followed by oral acyclovir to complete the therapy

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what causes syphilis?

Treponema Pallidum

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how is syphilis acquired?

organism penetrating intact mucous membranes or skin abrasions → immune response causes initial symptoms at site of infection (sometimes asymptomatic) → disseminates systemically

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primary syphilis

single lesion that eventually heals 3-6 weeks later

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what is secondary syphilis?

multisystem involvement secondary to hematogenous and lymphatic spread, resolving in 4-10 weeks

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what does secondary syphilis look like?

rash (often on palms and soles)

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latent syphilis or unknown duration syphilis

when there is a + test for syphilis but no evidence of disease, infection occurring within the past 12 months or unknown

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are patients with latent syphilis or unknown duration syphilis infectious sexually?

no (except mother to fetus)

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what can latent syphilis or unknown duration syphilis progress to?

tertiary or late neurosyphilis

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how is syphilis diagnosed?

non treponema tests (NT, Lipoidal antigen tests)

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syphilis NT test risk

may show false negatives in primary and secondary syphilis or false positive for other infections/pregnancy

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what is a TT (treponemal test)?

highly specific test used to detect antibodies against treponemal-specific antigens

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what does syphilis diagnosis require?

both NT and treponema tests (if NT test positive confirm with TT and vice vera)

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what is used to treat syphilis?

penicillin G (safe during pregnancy as well)

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dosing frequency for primary, secondary and early latent syphilis

benzathine penicillin G once IM (anything else = 3 times)

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what is given for syphilis if someone has a PCN allergy?

doxycycline PO 14 days

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what is given for late latent syphilis or unknown duration if PCN allergy?

doxycycline for 28 days

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neurosyphilis treatment

penicillin G but much more than other types of syphilis

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Jarisch Herxheimer Reaction

cytokine storm type reaction that occurs after penicillin G treatment of syphilis (6-8 hours after)

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what does the Jarisch Herxheimer Reaction look like and how long does it last?

resembles bacterial sepsis and lasts 12-24 hrs

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what is Jarisch Herxheimer Reaction most common with?

early syphilis (highest bacterial burden)

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what is Jarisch Herxheimer Reaction prevented with?

aspirin q 4 hr for 24-48 hours

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what is Doxy PEP for syphilis?

doxycycline 200 mg can be used