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Genital infections in gynaecology lec.3

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Presentation on theme: "Genital infections in gynaecology lec.3"— Presentation transcript:

1 Genital infections in gynaecology lec.3
Dr. Alyaa 2016/2017

2 Other genital infections:
Human papillomavirus Epidemiology • DNA virus, many subtypes. • Subtypes 6 and 11 cause genital warts (condylomata acuminata). • 25% of people presenting with warts have other concurrent STIs. • Commonest viral STI in England. • Subtypes 16 and 18 associated with CIN and cervical neoplasia. Symptoms - Majority asymptomatic. - Irritation. - Painless lumps anywhere in the genitoanal area - Warts may be exophytic, single or multiple, keratinized or not keratinized, broad base or pedunculated, and some are pigmented

3 Genital warts

4 Florid vulval warts

5 Cervical warts

6 Diagnosis - clinical appearance
Diagnosis - clinical appearance. - Biopsy & Histology of removed wart - on cervical cytology (smear tests) or colposcopy Complications HPV 16 and 18 associated with high-grade CIN and cervical neoplasia. Smoking and immunosuppression both affect viral clearance thereby increasing the risk.

7 Treatment for genital warts
Removal of the visible wart. High rate of recurrence Clinic treatment • Cryotherapy. • Trichloroacetic acid. • Electrosurgery/scissors excision/laser. Home treatment (both contraindicated if pregnancy risk): • Podophyllotoxin cream or solution: this is self-applied and must be used for about 4–6wks. • Imiquimod cream: this is also a self-applied immune response modifier. It may need to be used for up to 16wks.

8 Implications in pregnancy • Genital warts tend to grow rapidly in pregnancy, but usually regress after delivery. • Very rarely, babies exposed perinatally may develop laryngeal or genital warts so we should reduce neonatal exposure to the virus & it is not an indication for CS.

9 Genital ulcer disease Classification of genital ulcers Infective causes: - Herpes simplex - Primary syphilis - Lymphogranuloma veneri - Chancroid - HIV Non infective causes - Aphthous ulcer - Trauma - Skin disease - Bahcet syndrome - Sarcoidosis

10 Herpes simplex Epidemiology • DNA virus—herpes simplex type 1 (orolabial/genital) and type 2 (genital only). • Third most common STI in England in Symptoms Primary HSV infection is usually the most severe Involve vulva, vagina and cervix, and often results in: • Prodrome (tingling/itching of skin in affected area). • Flu-like illness +/– inguinal lymphadenopathy. • Painful vesicles and multiple ulcerations on vulva • urinary retention.

11 Primary herpes of vulva

12 Vulval herpis infection

13 Recurrent attacks : result from reactivation of latent virus in the dorsal root ganglia, and are normally shorter and less severe. triggered by: - Stress. - Sexual intercourse. - Menstruation • The spectrum of severity is: • asymptomatic shedding of the virus. • Ulcers resembling small abrasions on the vulva. • Localized clusters of vesicles & ulcers 1-2 cm in diameters • Wide spread or chronic ulceration, like primary one seen in pregnant women. • Large atypical chronic ulcers in immunosuppresed patient.

14 Complications of HSV infection (usually of primary infection) • Psychological distress • Neurological involvement like aseptic meningitis and transverse myelitis • Herpes keratitis causing corneal scarring and blindness. • Sacral radiculopathy—causing urinary retention and constipation. • Disseminated infection. Diagnosis • Usually from appearance of the typical rash. • PCR testing of vesicular fluid (most sensitive—gold standard). • Culture of vesicular fluid. • Serum antibody tests are of no use for diagnosing primary herpes.

15 Treatment • Symptomatic relief with simple analgesia, saline bathing, and topical anaesthetic. • Oral aciclovir (200mg 5x day for 5 days), double dose/length if immunosuppressed. • Topical aciclovir is not beneficial. • Condoms/abstinence may reduce transmission rates. • If recurrent episodes: long term suppression with aciclovir 400 mg twice a day • Suppressive antiviral treatment—considered if >6 recurrences/year.

16 Syphilis Primary syphilis: • First manifestation is painless ulcer (chancre) • The chancre is in form of shallow punched-out ulcer with well defined edges &smooth shiny floor with rubbery consistency &exudes serous discharge. • Usually single but can be multiple • regional lymph nodes enlargement • common site is cervix • it arise 3-6 weeks after infection • resolve spontaneously without treatment after few weeks • diagnosis done by - darkfield microscope. - serological test: specific like (FTA) test, and (TPHA) test or non specific test like (VDRL) test can be used.

17 chancre

18 Secondary syphilis • occur 6 months after the disappearance of chancre • systemic non itchy maculopapular rash, involving the palms and soles • florid lesions resembling warts (condylomata lata) mainly in peri-anal area • mucous patch and linear ulcers (snail track) on the mucosal surfaces • generalized lymphadenopathy • alopecia, arthritis and meningitis • diagnosis by serological test which are positive with VDRL titer 1/32 or more

19 Syphilis: condylomata lata

20 Tertiary syphilis • A firm elastic tumours may occur in skin, mucosa, bones & viscera called gummata • neurosyphilis manifest within 5 years of infection in form of meningovascular syphilis with stroke • 20% has cardiovascular syphilis like thoracic aortic aneurysm or aortic regurgitation.

21 Treatment • Treatment of choice is penicillin like:
- procaine penicillin 1.2 MU daily i.m., for 12 .days or - Benzathine penicillin 2.4 MU i.m. repeated after 7 days. • Doxycycline 100 mg twice a day for 14 days • Erythromycin 500 mg, four times a day for 14 days 5 • There is risk of vertical transmission, neonate at risk should be evaluated and received penicillin injection • Less severe infection occur late in life manifest as a congenital syphilis including nerve deafness, interstitial keratitis, and- abnormal teeth.

22 Lymphogranuioma venereum
• It is caused by specific serovars of Chlamydia trachomatis( L1- L3) • Small superficial ulcer slowly increase in size • Enlarged inguinal lymph nodes which can matted together and discharging pus forming bubo • Treatment by tetracycline and surgical interference Chancroid • Caused by Haemophilus Ducreyi bacilli • Small, shallow ulcers, multiple and painful with irregular edge • Localized lymphadenopathy • Diagnosed via Specialized culture, Isolation of Ducrey’s bacillus on biopsy • Treatment either by Single oral dose of azithromycin 2 g, Ceftriaxone, or Erythromycin

23 Granuloma inguinale • Caused by Klebsiella granulomatosis
• Discrete papules on the skin or vulva which enlarge and form beefy red painful ulcers • Healing end with fibrosis lead to lymphoedema and elephantiasis • Diagnosis :Donovan bodies: intracellular inclusions seen in phagocytes or histiocytes. • Treatment by Erythromycin.

24 Genital tuberculosis • Caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis • clinical features:.1. Amenorrhoea (affects endometrium). 2. Infertility (affects tube). 3. Acute/chronic pelvic pain. 4. Frozen pelvis due to severe multiple adhesions. • diagnosis: 1. Histological confirmation from endometrium and Fallopian tube. 2. Mantoux test. 3. Heaf test. 4. Chest x-ray. • Treatment: Rifampicin, Isoniazid, Pyrazinamide. Treatments can last from six to 12 months.


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