• Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs)
OR
• Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs)
                    Objectives
General Goal:
• To know the major cause(s) of these infections, how
  they are transmitted, and the major manifestations
  of the infections.
Specific objectives
5. To identify the common cause of each of the STD,
   and to know the common or pathognomonic signs of
   the infections.
2. To know the major manifestations of each infection
   and differentiate it from other infections in the
   course.
7. Use serology in diagnosing syphilis, and to be familiar
   with the pathogenesis of syphilis.
8. To know how to diagnose, treat and prevent these
   infections.
  STDs will be divided into 5 different groups
    based on their clinical presentations
2. Diseases Characterized by Genital Ulcers
3. Diseases Characterized by Urethritis and Cervicitis
4. Other STDs
   –   Pelvic inflammatory Disease
   –   Genital Warts (Human Papillomavirus Infections)
5. Diseases Characterized by Vaginal Discharge
6. Ectoparasitic Infections
Some STDs begin as localized infections, others are
   primary systemic ( AIDS, syphilis, HSV) 
Common Venereal Infections (STDs)
Bacterial
•   Gonorrhea               Neisseria gonorrhoeae
•   Syphilis                Treponema pallidum
•   Chlamydial Infections   Chlamydia trachomatis
•   Chancroid               Haemophilus ducreyi
•   Ureaplasma Infection    Ureaplasma urealyticum
•   Granuloma inguinale     Calymatobacterium
                            granulomatous
     Common Venereal Infections (STDs)
Viral
•   Genital herpes simplex           HSV
•   Papilloma virus infections       HPV
•   AIDS                             HIV
•   Hepatitis                       HBV
•   Molluscum contagiosum virus
Protozoa
• Trichomoniasis                    Trichomonas vaginalis
Fungi
• Vulvovaginal candidiasis    Candida albicans
Ectoparasites
• Scabies                    Sarcopties scabiei
• Phthirus pubis              Pubic louse infestation
STD : Clinical Features
Symptoms that Suggest STD
•   Abnormal discharge from vagina or penis
•   Pain or burning sensation with urination
•   Ulcer or blister on genitals
•   Swellings in the groin
•   Abnormal vaginal bleeding
•   Unusual severe menstrual cramps
•   Pain in the lower abdomen in women
•   Painful sexual intercourse
          Vaginal Discharge
• Neisseria gonorrheae    Purrulent
• Trichomonas vaginalis   Frothy, foul-smelling,
                             yellowish green
• Gardnerella vaginalis   Grey–white,
                          unpleasant fishy odor
• Candida albicans        Thick-white, curd-like
• Chlamydia trachomatis   Thin grey-white
    Ulcers on External Genitalia
              Occurrence        Number and       Tenderness          Ulcer Appearance               Adenopathy
Diseases                         Location
  HSV        Most common         Clusters of       Tender         Uniform size clean base       Tender inguinal nodes
                               ulcers on labia                     erythematous border
                                  and penis
 Syphilis   Less common than   One or two on     Little to no   Clean base indurated border        Rubbery, mildly
                  HSV.          vagina and       tenderness                                           tender
                                   penis
Chancroid   Less common than     One or two,       Painful        Can be large, ragged and          Very tender,
                  HSV.           lesions may                     necrotic base, undermined        fluctuant inguinal
                                coalesce, On                                edge                        nodes
                               labia and penis
  LGV            Rare          Ulcer lasts 2-3    Painless      Ulcer spontaneously heals at      Fluctuant inguinal
                                weeks, labia                    time of fluctuant adenopathy            nodes
                                  and penis
Granuloma      Very Rare:      Kissing lesions    Painless      Clean, beefy read base, stark    Nodes usually firm
Inguinale                      labia and penis                  white heaped-up ulcer edges       can mimic LGV.
Herps vesicles
  in female
Herps vesicles in male
                Herpes
                   H. Ducre (Chanroid
Granuloma
 inguinale
                   Gonorrhea
     LGV     LGV
                     Genital warts
• Caused by HPV (condyloma accminatum),types 16, 18,
  and 31 are the predominate cause, Soft, fleshy,
  cauliflower-like lesions lesions on the skin, genitalia,
  perineum, and perianal regions.
• Or by Treponema pallidum (condlyloma latum), these
  are painless mucosal warty erosions in the genitals
  and perineum
condyloma lata   condyloma acuminata
       Lab Diagnosis
  Specimens
• Urethral swab
  N. gonorrheae, C. trachomatis, Ureaplasma
• Cervical swab
  N. gonorrheae, C. trachomatis, HSV
• High vaginal swab
  & Vaginal discharge
  T. vaginalis, Candida, G. vaginalis
• Genital Ulcer Specimens
  T. pallidum, H. ducreyi, C. trachomatis, HSV
                  Lab Diagnosis
  Microscopy
 Gonorrhea           : Intra & extracellular Gram-ve diplococci
 Syphilis           : Motile spirochaetes by
                       dark field microscopy
 Trichomoniasis     : Motile T. vaginalis trophozoites
 Candidiasis:       : Yeast cells by wet & Gram-smear
 Bacterial Vaginosis : Clue cells
 Granuloma          : Intracellular bipolar
  inguinale           stained cocco-bacilli
Gonococci   Gonococci
                                                 Chlamydial inclusion bodies
Granuloma inguinale them Donovan bodies.
                                           Eosinophilic intra nuclear inclusion
   Treponema                               bodies (HSV)
                 Lab Diagnosis
  Culture
• N. gonorrhoeae, H. ducreyi
Other Methods
                                 Gonoccocci
• Tissue culture, ELISA            culture
   o C. trachomatis
   o LGV
   o Genital herpes
              SYPHILIS
Source of Infection
• Patient with Primary or Secondary syphilis
Modes of Transmission
1. Venereal : Sexual contact
2. Non-venereal
A) Direct Contact
• With mucous membranes (kissing)
• Blood Transfusion
B) Mother to Child – Congenital syphilis
• Hard painless chancre
        SYPHILIS : Lab Diagnosis
Dark-field Microscopy of discharge from chancre
Serodiagnosis
Non-specific tests : To detect non-specific Abs
VDRL & RPR Tests
• Are positive in majority of Pri syphilis
• Almost always positive in Sec syphilis
• Have good prognostic value
Specific tests : To detect specific Abs
•   FTA-Abs
    (Fluorescent treponemal antibody Absorption) Test
•   MHA-TP
    (MicroHaemAgglutination test for T. pallidum, is an indirect hemagglutination test
    using T. pallidum antigens absorbed to erthrocytes)
         GONORRHEA
Source
• Usually asymptomatic females : 50% asymptomatic
Males
• Purulent urethral discharge & dysuria
• Stricture formation
Females
• Vaginal discharge and dysuria
• Pelvic inflammatory disease - leads to sterility
Treatment
• Penicillin
• Ceftriaxone for penicillin-resistant
      CHLAMYDIA TRACHOAMATIS
            INFECTIONS
 Non-gonococcal urethritis in men
• Mucopurrulent urethral discharge
• May progress to epidydmitis & orchitis
 Cervicitis & Vaginitis
• Mucopurrulent vaginal discharge
 Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
• May lead to secondary infertility
 Lymphogranuloma Venereum (LGV)
• Caused by serotypes L1, L2 & L3
• A STD with lesions on genitalia & LNs (buboes)
      GRANULOMA INGUINALE
• Caused by Calymmatobacterium granulomatous
• Base of ulcer is “BEEFY”
• Spreads by contact so is known as
  “KISSING ulcers”
• LN may enlarge
Treatment : Tetracycline
CHANCROID
• Caused by Haemophilus ducreyi
   ° Produce soft ulcers on external genitalia
   ° Local lymphadenitis (bubo)
• Treatment:
   ° Ceftriaxone or ciprofloxacin
        Scabies - mite infestation
• The predominant symptom of scabies is pruritus.
  Scabies in adults often is sexually acquired,
  although scabies in children usually is not.
• Causes itching
• Diagnosis
  – Grossly or microscopically demonstrate mite, its eggs,
    larvae, or feces.
  – Demonstrate lesion pruritic, erythematous, papular
     eruptions.
Sarcoptes scabiei
Sarcoptes scabiei, the scabies or
           itch mite
             Pediculosis (crabs)
• Caused by lice (pediculosis pubis )
• Patients who have pediculosis pubis (i.e., pubic
  lice) usually seek medical attention because of
  pruritus or because they notice lice or nits on
  their pubic hair. Pediculosis pubis is usually
  transmitted by sexual contact.
Diagnosis
  – Finding lice or nits attached to genital hairs (definitive
    Diagnosis)
pediculosis pubis,
Finding lice or nits attached to
  genital hairs (definitive Dx)
Treatment
• Permethrin 1% creme rinse applied to
  affected areas and washed off after 10
  minutes.
• Bedding and clothing should be
  decontaminated (i.e., machine-washed,
  machine-dried using the heat cycle, or dry-
  cleaned) or removed from body contact for at
  least 72 hours.
                    Prevention
Based on the following five major concepts: 
• Education and counseling of persons at risk on ways to
  adopt safer sexual behavior; 
• Identification of asymptomatically infected persons
  and of symptomatic persons unlikely to seek
  diagnostic and treatment services;
• Effective diagnosis and treatment of infected
  persons, evaluation, treatment, and counseling of sex
  partners of persons who are infected with an STD 
• Preexposure vaccination of persons at risk for
  vaccine-preventable STDs (Hep A and B)
• Prevention of STD begins with changing the sexual
  behaviors that place persons at risk for infection.
        Case presentation
A 24-year-old women went to her
gynecologist for routine pelvic
examination. The patient had no
symptoms, but the physician collected
routine screening tests for gonorrhea,
chlyamydiosis, HIV, and syphilis. All
laboratory test results came back
negative except for the chlamydia test
which was positive
           Case presentation
A 25-year-old woman presented with genital
ulceration. This was accompanied by malaise
and low grade fever. The patient complained
of considerable local discomfort with a
burning sensation of the external genitalia
which preceded the development of genital
ulceration. On questioning she gave no history
of previous episodes of genital ulceration. An
association inguinal lymphadenopathy was
noted on clinical examination
               Questions
• What is your clinical diagnosis?
• How is this disease transmitted?
• What complication may be associated
  with this clinical condition?
• How would you confirm your clinical
  diagnosis in the laboratory?
• What is your differential diagnosis?
                Differential Characteristics of Genital Ulcer Diseases
              Occurrence        Number and       Tenderness         Ulcer Appearance              Adenopathy
Diseases                         Location
  HSV        Most common         Clusters of       Tender         Uniform size clean base       Tender inguinal
                               ulcers on labia                     erythematous border              nodes
                                  and penis
 Syphilis   Less common than   One or two on     Little to no   Clean base indurated border     Rubbery, mildly
                  HSV.          vagina and       tenderness                                        tender
                                   penis
Chancroid   Less common than     One or two,       Painful        Can be large, ragged and       Very tender,
                  HSV.           lesions may                     necrotic base, undermined     fluctuant inguinal
                                coalesce, On                                edge                     nodes
                               labia and penis
  LGV            Rare          Ulcer lasts 2-     Painless      Ulcer spontaneously heals at   Fluctuant inguinal
                               3 weeks, labia                        time of fluctuant               nodes
                                 and penis                              adenopathy
Granuloma      Very Rare:      Kissing lesions    Painless        Clean, beefy read base,      Nodes usually firm
Inguinale                      labia and penis                  stark white heaped-up ulcer     can mimic LGV.
                                                                           edges
MOTHER TO CHILD
TRANSMISSION OF
   INFECTIONS
Intrapartum Transmission
•   Streptococcus agalactiae
•   Neisseria gonorrhoeae
•   Listeria monocytogenes
•   Chlamydia trachomatis
•   Escherichia coli
•   CMV, HSV, HBV, HIV
Perinatal Transmission (infection is
    often include a period from 20-28 weeks to 7-28
    days after birth)
•   CMV
•   HSV
•   HBV
•   HIV
•   VZV
Transplacental Transmission
• T : Toxoplasma gondii
• O: Other
                                   TORCH
• R : Rubella virus
• C : Cytomegalovirus
• H : Herpes simplex
Other iclude
• Listeria monocytoges
• HBS, EBV,HIV, varicella zoster
• Malaria
• Syphilis