11/28 STD Clinical Correlation – Flashcards
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| Name the STDs characterized by discharges. |
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| gonorrhea, chlamydia, nongonococcal urethritis, mucopurulent cervicitis, trichomonas vaginitis/urethritis, candidiasis |
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| Name the STDs characterized by sores. |
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| syphilis, genital herpes uncommon in US= lymphogranuloma venereum, chancroid (Haemophilus ducreyi), granuloma inguinale |
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| How do you treat a gonorrhea? |
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| cefixime 400 mg orally X 1 dose OR ceftriazone 125 mg IM x 1 dose PLUS Azithromycin 1 gram orally x 1 dose (for possible chlamydia coinfection) |
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| What is the incubation period of gonorrhea in a male? |
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| 1-14 days (usually 2-5 days) |
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| What are the symptoms of gonorrhea in a man? |
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| dysuria and urethral discharge (5% asymptomatic) |
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| How do you diagnose gonorrhea? |
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| gram stain of urethral or cervical smear, NAAT |
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| What are complications of gonorrhea? |
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| men= acute epididymitis, disseminated GC women= PID, disseminated GC |
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| Where does gonorrhea infect females? |
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| endocervical canal is the primary site but 70-90% also colonize urethra |
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| What is the incubation of gonorrhea in women? |
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| unclear, sx usually in 10 days |
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| What are the symptoms of gonorrhea infection in women? |
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| majority asymptomatic; may have vaginal discharge, dysuria, labial pain/swelling, abdomenal pain |
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| What causes nongonococcal urethritis? |
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| 20-40% chlamydia 15-25% mycoplasma genitalium 10-20% ureaplasma urealyticum 5-15% trichomonas vaginalis 1-4% adenovirus 1-2% herpes symplex virus |
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| What are the symptoms of nongonococcal urethritis? |
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| mild dysuria and mucoid discharge |
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| How do you diagnose nongonococcal urethritis? |
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| urethral smear= more than or equal to 5 PMNs (usually 15), or OI field urine microscopic= more than or equal to 10 PMNs Leukocyte esterase (+) |
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| What are the symptoms of mucopurulent cervicitis? |
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| pelvic pain, vaginal d/c, dysparunia, post-coital bleeding |
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| How do you diagnose cervicitis clinically? |
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| purulent or mucopurulent endocervical exudate visible in the endocervical canal OR yellow or green d/c visible on endocervical swab specimen OR easily induced cervical bleeding |
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| What is empiric treatment for chlamydia? |
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| azithromycin 1 gram single dose OR doxycycline 100 mg twice daily for 7 days |
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| What is the empiric treatment for GC? |
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| ceftriaxone 125 mg IM single dose OR cefixime 400 mg single dose |
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| What are organisms other than chlamydia and gonorrhea associated with mucopurulent cervicitis? |
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| TV, BV, HSV, MG |
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| What percent of C. trachomatis infections are asymptomatic? |
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| women= 80-90% men= 70-80% |
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| What percent of N. gonorrhoeae infections in men and women are asymptomatic? |
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| 50-70% of women 20-30% of men |
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| What percent of women with GC develop PID? |
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| 10-20 |
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| What are the CDC minimal criteria for PID? |
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| uterine fundal tenderness, adnexal tenderness, or cervical motion tenderness |
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| What are the symptoms of PID? |
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| endocervical d/c, fever, lower abdominal pain |
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| What are the complications of PID? |
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| infertility (15-24% with 1 episode PID secondary to GC or chlamydia), 7x risk of ectopic pregnancy with 1 episode PID, chronic pelvic pain in 18% |
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| What causes acute PID? |
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| 20-40% = N. gonorrhoeae 20% = C. trachomatis 40-60% = mixed aerobes and anaerobes including mycoplasma hominis + N. gonorrhoeae |
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| Recomended outpatient treatment guidelines for PID= |
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| ceftriaxone 250 mg IM once OR other parenteral 2rd generation cephalosporin (ceftizoxime, cefotaxime) PLUS doxycycline 100 mg orally 2 times a day for 14 days, metronidazole is optional |
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| What are you looking for on smear of pt with gonorrhea? |
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| gram negative intracellular diplococci (GNID) |
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| What has replaced gram stain in clinic? |
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| one step methylene blue stain |
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| What has the highest sensitivity and specificity for chlamydia endocervical specimens? |
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| amplification |
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| T/F A negative culture, antigen detection, and gen-probe for chlamydia means the pt doesn't have chlamydia. |
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| false, those test have high specificity but relatively low sensitivity for chlamydia |
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| What causes cervicitis? |
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| chlamydia, gonorrhea, genital herpes |
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| What causes vaginitis? |
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| candidiasis, trichomoniasis, bacterial vaginosis |
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| What are the microbial shifts that occur in bacterial vaginosis? |
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| decrease in lactobacillus 100-1000 increase in G. vaginalis, anaerobes, mycoplasmas |
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| What physiologic changes are associated with bacterial vaginosis? |
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| elevation of vaginal pH above 4.5, production of high concentrations of amines, and thin homongenous skim-milk like discharge |
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| What are possible complications of BV? |
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| abnormal pregnancy outcome, increased risk of post-hysterectomy wound infection, PID, endometritis following elective abortion, increased risk of HIV and other STD transmission |
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| How do you diagnose bacterial vaginosis clinically? |
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| Amsel's critera= 3 out of 4 1) vaginal pH >4.5 2) positive "whiff" test 3) more than 20% of epithelial cells are clue cell 4) characteristic vaginal d/c (homogenous skim milk-like) |
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| How do you treat bacterial vaginosis? |
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| metronidazole orally, clindamycin cream, metronidazole gel |
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| How do you treat yeast vaginitis? |
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| topical antifungals, gluconazole single oral dose |
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| How do you treat trichomoniasis? |
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| metronidozole single dose or tinidazole single dose |
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| What causes painful genital ulcers? |
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| chancroid and genital herpes simplex |
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| What causes painless genital ulcer diseases? |
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| syphilis, lymphogranuloma venereum, granuloma inguinale |
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| How do you treat syphilis? |
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| benzathine penicillin 2.4 million units IM X 1 dose |
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| What is the incubation period of primary syphilis? |
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| 10-90 days (average 3 weeks) |
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| Describe the syphilitic chancre. |
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| early macule/papule erodes into clean based, painless, indurated ulcer with smooth firm borders. Unnoticed in 15-30% of patients. Resolves in 1-5 weeks and highly infectious |
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| What stage of syphilis represents hematogenous dissemination of spirochetes? |
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| secondary |
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| How long after the chancre does secondary syphilis appear? |
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| 2-8 weeks |
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| What are the symptoms and duration of symptoms in secondary syphilis? |
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| rash-whole body (includes palms and soles), mucous patches, condylomata lata (highly infectious), constitutional symptoms, resolves in 2-10 weeks |
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| T/F Primary infectious with genital HSV is commonly asymptomatic. |
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| true |
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| Chancroid versus syphilitic chancre. |
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| syphilis= induration, painless, clean base chancroid= undetermined lesion border, painful lesion, purulent exudate |
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| Classic characteristics of genital herpes to differentiate it from other ulcerative STDs. |
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| multiple ulcers, shallow lesions, painful lesions |
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| How sensitive/specific are "classic" signs for the diagnosis of genital ulcer disease? |
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| low sensitivity but high specificity |
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| What is characteristic physical exam finding of lymphogranuloma venereum? |
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| groove sign |
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| Name the syphilis serologic assays. |
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| Reagin tests (VDRL, RPR, ART) treponemal tests (FTA-ABS, MHA-TP) |
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| When is serologic testing for untreated syphilis most sensitive? |
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| secondary stage for both reagin and treponemal tests (treponemal test is also very sensitive during late syphilis) |
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| How do you treat chancroid? |
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| azithromycin, ceftriaxone |
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| How do you treat genital herpes? |
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| acyclovir, valcyclovir, famciclovir |