Genitourinary Tract Infections
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SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS (STI) III
General Goal: To know the major cause(s) of these
infections, how they are transmitted, and the major manifestations of the
infections.
Specific Educational Objectives: The student
should be able to:
1. identify the common cause of each of the STI's discussed in
this handout and the next two STI handouts. Know the common or pathognomonic
signs of the infections.
2. describe the major manifestations of each infection and
differentiate it from other infections in the course.
3. describe how you diagnose, treat and prevent these
infections.
Reading: MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY by P.R. Murray, K.S.
Rosenthal, G.S. Kobayashi and M.A. Pfaller, 3rd Edition. depends on the
organism.
F.S. Southwick, Infectious Diseases in 30 Days, 1st
edition, McGraw Hill. p. 289-318.
Lecture: Dr. Neal R. Chamberlain
References:
-
Burstein GR, Zenilman JM. Nongonococcal urethritis--a new paradigm.
Clin Infect Dis 1999 Jan;28 Suppl 1:S66-73
-
Hoeprich, PD., MC. Jordan, and AR. Ronald. Infectious Diseases: A Treatise
of Infectious Processes. 5th edition. 1994. J.B. Lippincott Company,
Philadelphia, PA.
-
CDC. The national plan to eliminate syphilis from the United States.
Atlanta, Georgia: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC, National
Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention, 1999:1--84.
-
Primary
and Secondary Syphilis --- United States, 1999. MMWR.
50(01);113-117.
-
Sexually
Transmitted Disease Guidelines 2002. Recommendations
and Reports
May 10, 2002/Vol. 51/No.RR-6 (http://www.cdc.gov/std/treatment/TOC2002TG.htm)
-
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention. Sexually Transmitted Disease
Surveillance 2002 Supplement, Chlamydia Prevalence Monitoring Project.
Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, October 2003.
The STD's in this handout include:
-
Pelvic inflammatory Disease
-
Genital Warts (Human Papillomavirus Infections)
-
Epididymitis
-
Proctitis, Proctocolitis, and Enteritis
I. Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID)
II. Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) is a disease of women defined as the
clinical syndrome resulting from the ascending spread of microorganisms from
the vagina and endocervix to the endometrium, the fallopian tubes and/or to
contiguous structures.
PID is caused by more than one organism. May include endometritis,
salpingitis, tuba-ovarian abscess, and pelvic peritonitis.
A. Etiology
- N. gonorrhoeae most common
- C. trachomatis most common- there are 4-8 million chlamydial
infections per year in the U.S. (number includes men and women; week 45 of
2000 there have been 561,649 reported cases. not all cases result in PID.)
- Anaerobic bacteria (ex. Bacteroides)
- Facultative Gram negative rods (ex. E. coli)
- Mycoplasma hominis
- Actinomyces israelii (often seen in women with long-standing
intrauterine devices (IUD).
B. Pathogenesis
Prior
infections of the fallopian tubes (usually of N. gonorrhoeae or C.
trachomatis) take place resulting in damage to the ciliary cells lining the
fallopian tubes.
Another infection ensues and the organisms are able to
ascend the fallopian tubes and cause infections in contiguous structures.
C. Epidemiology
1. The morbidity produced by PID is greater than that of any other serious
infection. In the U.S. about 850,000 women, requiring more than 212,000 hospital
admissions and 115,000 surgical procedures are reported each year.
2. Risk factors include:
- Multiple sex partners
- History of previous PID
- Menstruation.
- IUD use (oral contraceptives however decrease the risk)
- Marital status (single women are at higher risk)
- Asymptomatic gonococcal infection in either sexual partner.
D. Symptoms and Signs
- Moderate fever (generally above 99°F)
- Bilateral lower abdominal pain that is maximal in the region of the
fallopian tubes and generally lasts no longer than 14 days.
- Increased vaginal discharge
- Irregular bleeding
- Tenderness on cervical motion
- Tender adnexal mass(es)
- Purulent endocervical discharge
- Nausea and vomiting
NOTE: Only about 20% of the women with PID show all these signs. These signs are
quite similar to other pathologic conditions such as appendicitis, ectopic
pregnancy, septic abortion, rupture of an ovarian cyst, pyelonephritis, etc.
E. Sequelae
- The most common cause of involuntary infertility in women.
- Dissemination to liver resulting in a perihepatitis.
- Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome; "Violin
Strings" form between the abdominal wall and liver capsule (may occur
in both gonococcal and nongonococcal types of PID).
- Unilateral or bilateral ovarian abscesses (image
2).
- Tubal occlusion, scarring, and adhesions (the adhesions can result in
chronic abdominal pain).
- Death due to rupture of the ovarian abscesses.
F. Diagnosis (Dx)
- Definitive Dx consists of direct visualization of inflamed fallopian
tube(s) on laparoscopy, laparotomy, or biopsy evidence of salpingitis (laparoscopic
image of salpingitis)(sonograph of
salpingitis). Only a confirmed culture of a biopsy of the fallopian tube
positively identifies the etiology of salpingitis.
- A presumptive Dx can be made on clinical grounds alone.
G. Laboratory findings useful in Dx PID
- Positive culture for N. gonorrhoeae or
C. trachomatis from the cul-de-sac
or endocervix. PCR
tests are available.
- Positive Gram stain for intracellular gonococci from the cul-de-sac or
endocervix.
- Elevated white blood cell count.
- Elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate.
- A "recent
recommendation" is to check sexually active adolescent females
twice a year for C. trachomatis. This is due to the high prevalence
(29%) of infection with this organism.
F. Treatment
- Can be treated on an outpatient basis only if their temperature is <38oC,
WBC <11,000/mm3, there is minimal evidence of peritonitis,
active bowel sounds, and they are able to tolerate oral nourishment and
treatment.
- Hospitalize the patient if:
- the patient fails the first set of tests in item number 1
- the Dx is uncertain
- surgical emergencies such as appendicitis and ectopic pregnancy must be
excluded
- a pelvic abscess is suspected
- severe illness precludes outpatient management e. the patient is
pregnant
- the patient is unable to follow or tolerate outpatient regimen
- the clinical follow-up after 48-72 hours of starting antibiotics cannot
be arranged
- Unfortunately, no single antibiotic will be active against all possible
pathogens.
- Hospitalized patients
- Start out with parenteral therapy. Clinical experience should guide
decisions regarding transition to oral therapy, which usually can be
initiated within 24 hours of clinical improvement.
- Cefotetan 2 g IV every 12 hours
OR
Cefoxitin 2 g IV every 6 hours
PLUS
Doxycycline 100 mg orally or IV every 12 hours.
- Switching to oral therapy can include: Ofloxacin 400 mg orally
twice a day for 14 days
OR Levofloxacin 500 mg orally once daily for 14 days WITH or
WITHOUT Metronidazole 500 mg
orally twice a day for 14 days.
- Ambulatory therapy:
- Ofloxacin 400 mg orally twice a day for 14 days
OR Levofloxacin 500 mg orally once daily for 14 days WITH or
WITHOUT Metronidazole 500 mg
orally twice a day for 14 days.
G. Follow-up
- Close medical follow-up is essential in PID patients due to the higher
failure rates of therapeutic regimens.
- Patients should demonstrate substantial clinical improvement (e.g.,
defervescence; reduction in direct or rebound abdominal tenderness; and
reduction in uterine, adnexal, and cervical motion tenderness) within 3 days
after initiation of therapy. Patients who do not improve within this period
usually require hospitalization, additional diagnostic tests, and surgical
intervention.
- If the patient is being treated as an outpatient, oral or parenteral
therapy, a follow-up examination should be performed within 72 hours using
the criteria for clinical improvement described above. If the patient has
not improved, hospitalization for parenteral therapy and further evaluation
are recommended.
- Some specialists recommend confirmation of clinical resolution by repeating exam and endocervical
culture 4-6 weeks after completing therapy.
- Sex partners should be check for STD's.
- Removal of IUD (this can take place during therapy).
II. Genital
warts (condyloma acuminata)
A. Etiology
-
Human Papilloma virus (HPV). There are more than 100 different types of the virus.
Different types of the virus are associated with distinct clinical manifestations.
| HPV Type |
Associated Disease |
| 6, 11, 42, 43, 44, 54 |
Genital warts, laryngeal papillomas |
| 16, 18, 31, 33, 39, 45, 51, 52 |
Dysplasia and carcinoma of the cervix |
-
Other types cause warts of the skin such as plantar warts.
B. Epidemiology
-
20 million people are infected with genital warts with 6.2 million new cases of
this disease every year.
-
More than 50% of sexually active adults will acquire HPV in their lifetime.
-
Most infections are transient; persistent infection is a major risk factor for cancer.
-
In the United States, there are 2.8 million abnormal Pap tests according to annual estimates, as well as 10,520 cases of cervical cancer, 3,900 deaths and 500,000 to 1 million cases of genital warts from HPV.
-
Worldwide, cervical cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in women, mostly in developing countries (80%) where there are no
Pap screening programs. There are 400,000 to 500,000 cases and 230,000 deaths from cervical cancer each year.
-
Subclinical Genital HPV Infection- HPV DNA (types 16, 18 (70%)) has been found in over
93% of the cervical
carcinomas and is believed to be the major cause of invasive cervical carcinoma.
-
Infection is almost always sexually transmitted, but the incubation period is
variable and it is often difficult to determine the source of infection. Within
ongoing relationships, sex partners usually are infected by the time of the
patient's diagnosis, although they may have no symptoms or signs of infection.
-
The natural history of genital warts is generally benign; the types of HPV that
usually cause external genital warts are not associated with cancer. Recurrence
of genital warts within the first several months after treatment is common and
usually indicates recurrence rather than reinfection.
-
Cervical cancer is the third most common gynecologic malignancy and the eighth
most common malignancy among women in the USA. The mean age for developing
cervical cancer is about 50 yr; however, it can affect women as young as 20.
-
Cervical cancer is essentially a sexually transmitted disease. Risk is inversely
related to age at first intercourse and directly related to the lifetime number
of sexual partners. Risk is also increased for sexual partners of men whose
previous partners had cervical cancer.
-
However, other factors appear to contribute to malignant transformation. For
example, cigarette smoking is associated with an increased risk of CIN and
cervical cancer.
C. Manifestations
-
Soft, fleshy, cauliflower-like lesions (exophytic)
lesions on
the skin, genitalia, perineum, and perianal
regions. The HPV infected cells of the cervix do not have any recognizable
lesion. Only after the addition of dilute acetic acid can one see an "acetowhite"
epithelium.
D. Diagnosis
-
For the cauliflower-like lesions, clinical
presentation is enough. These must be differentiated from condyloma
lata and molluscum contagiosum.
-
Placing dilute acetic acid on the cervix can reveal the acetowhite epithelium.
A "PAP" smear should be performed and the pathologist will look for
koilocytosis.
-
Precursor cells (cervical dysplasia, CIN) develop into invasive cervical cancer
over a number of years. CIN grades I, II, and III correspond to mild, moderate,
and severe cervical dysplasia. CIN III, which includes severe dysplasia and
carcinoma in situ, is unlikely to regress spontaneously and, if
untreated, may eventually penetrate the basement membrane, becoming invasive
carcinoma.
-
In situ DNA hybridization or PCR of the biopsy material. Not very
commonly performed.
E. Therapy
-
Cryotherapy, surgical excision, laser vaporization, cautery, podophyllin,
podophyllotoxin, 5-fluorouracil, trichloroacetic acid or interferon for
exophytic lesions.
-
Annual pap smears to stage subclinical infections with various treatments
depending of the stage of the disease progression (squamous intraepithelial
lesions (SIL)) or to cervical carcinoma.
-
Invasive squamous cell carcinoma usually remains localized or regional for a
considerable time; distant metastases occur late. The 5-yr survival rates are 80
to 90% for CIN stage I, 50 to 65% for stage II, 25 to 35% for stage III, and 0
to 15% for stage IV.
F. Prevention
-
Avoid contact with lesions.
-
The likelihood of transmission to future partners and the duration of
infectivity after treatment are unknown. The use of latex condoms has been
associated with a lower rate of cervical cancer, an HPV-associated disease.
III. Epididymitis
Etiology
Among sexually active men aged <35 years, epididymitis is most often
caused by C. trachomatis or N. gonorrhoeae. Epididymitis
caused by sexually transmitted enteric organisms (e.g., Escherichia coli)
also occurs among men who are the insertive partner during anal intercourse.
Nonsexually transmitted epididymitis that is associated
with urinary-tract infections caused by Gram-negative enteric organisms occurs
more frequently among men aged >35 years, men who have recently undergone
urinary-tract instrumentation or surgery, and men who have anatomical
abnormalities of the urinary tract.
Signs and Symptoms
Sexually transmitted epididymitis usually is accompanied by urethritis, which
often is asymptomatic. Men who have epididymitis typically have unilateral testicular pain and
tenderness; hydrocele and palpable swelling of the epididymis usually are
present.
Testicular torsion which is not an infection but has similar symptoms is a surgical
emergency and should be considered in all cases. It occurs more frequently among adolescents and in men without
evidence of inflammation or infection.
Diagnosis
The evaluation of men for epididymitis should include the following
procedures.
- A Gram-stained smear of urethral exudate or intraurethral swab specimen
for diagnosis of urethritis (i.e., >5 polymorphonuclear leukocytes
per oil immersion field) and for presumptive diagnosis of gonococcal
infection.
- A culture of intraurethral exudate or a nucleic acid amplification test
(either on intraurethral swab or first-void urine) for N. gonorrhoeae
and C. trachomatis.
- Examination of first-void uncentrifuged urine for leukocytes if the
urethral Gram stain is negative. A culture and Gram-stained smear of this
urine specimen should be obtained.
- Syphilis serology and HIV counseling and testing.
Therapy
Empiric therapy is indicated before culture results are available. Treatment
of epididymitis caused by C. trachomatis or N. gonorrhoeae will
result in a) microbiologic cure of infection, b) improvement of signs and
symptoms, c) prevention of transmission to others, and d) a decrease in
potential complications (e.g., infertility or chronic pain). As an adjunct to
therapy, bed rest, scrotal elevation, and analgesics are recommended until fever
and local inflammation have subsided.
For epididymitis most likely caused by gonococcal or chlamydial infection:
Ceftriaxone 250 mg IM in a single dose
PLUS
Doxycycline 100 mg orally twice a day for 10 days.
For epididymitis most likely caused by enteric organisms, for patients
allergic to cephalosporins and/or tetracyclines, or for epididymitis in patients
aged >35 years:
Ofloxacin 300 mg orally twice a day for 10 days
OR
Levofloxacin 500 mg orally once daily for 10 days
Although most patients can be treated on an outpatient basis, hospitalization
should be considered when severe pain suggests other diagnoses (e.g., torsion,
testicular infarction, or abscess) or when patients are febrile or noncompliant
in taking an antimicrobial regimen.
IV. Proctitis, Proctocolitis, and Enteritis
Proctitis and proctocolitis are usually transmitted following anal
intercourse. Enteritis is acquired among persons whose sexual practices
include oral-fecal contact.
Etiology
Proctitis- is an inflammatory condition involving the anus and rectum (the distal
10--12 cm). There are many causes of proctitis. They can be broken down into
four basic groups:
- sexually-transmitted disease
- non-sexually transmitted infection
- autoimmune disease
- noxious agents
Sexual disease related proctitis occurs with high frequency among homosexual men
and women who engage in anal intercourse. It is the most common means of
transmission.
The agents that can cause sexually-transmitted proctitis include N.
gonorrhoeae , HSV, T. pallidum, Chlamydia trachomatis and the
lymphogranuloma venereum serotypes of Chlamydia trachomatis. Entamoeba
histolytica is another agent which can cause proctitis and can be
transmitted by ano-oral sex.
Non-sexually transmitted infections causing proctitis are seen less frequently
than STD proctitis. The classical example of non-sexually transmitted infection
occurs in children and the proctitis is caused by Streptococcus pyogenes,
the same organism which causes strep throat.
Autoimmune proctitis is associated with diseases such as ulcerative colitis
or Crohn's disease.
Proctitis may also be caused by physical agents including chemicals inserted
into the rectum, medications and radiation. Radiation proctitis is seen in
association with radiotherapy as part of cancer treatment.
Risk factors include high-risk sexual practices, homosexuality, and autoimmune
disorders.
Proctocolitis- Pathogenic organisms include Campylobacter sp., Shigella
sp., Entamoeba histolytica, and, rarely, LGV serovars of C. trachomatis.
CMV or other opportunistic agents may be involved in immunosuppressed
HIV-infected patients.
Enteritis- In otherwise healthy persons, Giardia lamblia
is most frequently implicated.
Manifestations
Proctitis is inflammation limited to the rectum (the distal 10--12 cm)
that may be associated with anorectal pain, tenesmus, or rectal discharge.
Proctocolitis is associated with symptoms of proctitis plus diarrhea or
abdominal cramps and inflammation of the colonic mucosa extending to 12 cm above
the anus.
Enteritis usually results in diarrhea and abdominal cramping without signs of
proctitis or proctocolitis; it occurs among persons whose sexual practices
include oral-fecal contact.
Diagnosis
Evaluation for these syndromes should include appropriate diagnostic
procedures (e.g., anoscopy or sigmoidoscopy, stool examination, and culture).
Proctocolitis- Fecal leukocytes may be detected on stool examination depending on the
pathogen.
Enteritis-
Multiple stool examinations may be necessary to detect Giardia.
Treatment
When laboratory diagnostic capabilities are available, treatment decisions
should be based on the specific diagnosis.
Send comments and mail to Dr. Chamberlain, nchamberlain@atsu.edu
Revised 9/1/04
©2004 Neal R. Chamberlain, Ph.D., All rights reserved.