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Pathogens in Genital Tracts

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Late syphilis: lesions in the central nervous system may lead to general ... The only reliable serologic test for diagnosing neurological syphilis is the VDRL ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pathogens in Genital Tracts


1
Pathogens in Genital Tracts
2
Genital Tract
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae (GC)
  • Diseases
  • Uncomplicated infections urethritis in
    heterosexual males urethritis, proctitis, and
    pharyngitis in homosexual males urethritis,
    cervicitis, proctitis and vaginitis in females
  • Complicated disease pelvic inflammatory disease
    in females (endometriosis, salpingitis,
    peritonitis)

3
Genital Tract
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • Diseases
  • Complicated diseases disseminated gonococcal
    infections (DGI) in males and females (septic
    arthritis, endocarditis, meningitis)
  • Gonococcal ophthalmia neonatorum (neonates become
    infected in the birthing process)

4
Genital Tract
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • Epidemiology sexually transmitted up to 50 of
    infected females and 10 of infected males are
    asymptomatic (carriers)
  • Primary isolation gonococcus is fastidious
    optimum growth on enriched chocolate agar the
    bacterium can be overgrown when normal indigenous
    microbes are present selective media such
    Thayer-Martin or equivalent is required when
    cultured from nonsterile sites

5
Genital Tract
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • Direct examination Gram stains of urethral
    discharge in males is diagnostic (gram-negative
    intracellular and extracellular kidney-bean cocci
    in pairs) Gram stains of exudates from females
    is not diagnostic because they may carry
    nonpathogenic Neisseria species, as well as
    Acinetobacter species which morphologically
    resembles Neisseria species

6
Genital Tract
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • Primary isolation many strains of GC fails to
    grow if not provided a carbon dioxide enriched
    environment optimum temperature for growth in
    the laboratory is 35oC, it dies quickly in vitro
    at room temperature refrigeration is lethal to
    it almost instantaneously

7
Genital Tract
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • Colony and microscopic morphology and identifying
    characteristics were discussed in the respiratory
    Power Point slides in this series a summary of
    these results include
  • Tannish-white, smooth, shiny, low convex, 1-2mm
    colonies
  • Gram-negative diplococci (kidney beans)

8
Genital Tract
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • Summary identifying characteristics
  • Oxidase positive
  • No growth at room temperature (even on chocolate
    agar)
  • No growth at 35oC on nutrient agar or TSA without
    blood
  • Aerobically acidifies glucose but not maltose,
    sucrose, fructose, or lactose

9
Genital Tract
  • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • Summary identifying characteristics
  • Positive superoxol test
  • Hydroxyprolulaminopeptidase positive
  • DNAse negative

10
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Disease
  • Primary syphilis genital lesions (hard chancre)
    in heterosexual males and females rectal and
    ororpharyngeal lesions in homosexual males may
    or may not be self-limiting
  • Secondary syphilis widespread lesions on skin
    and mucous membranes very noticeable on palms of
    hands and souls of feet any organ can become
    infected

11
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Disease
  • Latent syphilis primary and secondary lesions
    heal without scarring patient is asymptomatic
    from months to years
  • Late syphilis 3-20 years after primary infection
    gummatous lesions of skin, mucous membranes,
    soft tissue, bones, eyes, central nervous system,
    and cardiovascular system

12
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Disease
  • Late syphilis lesions in the central nervous
    system may lead to general paralysis, and
    dementia lesions in the cardiovascular system
    can lead to aortic aneurism

13
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Epidemiology syphilis is primarily a sexually
    transmitted genital lesions, especially in
    females, may not be noticeable it can be passed
    congenitally from an infected mother to her
    fetus on rare occasions it can be transmitted by
    blood transfusions

14
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Diagnosis, direct exam
  • Detection of T. pallidum on direct exam is
    possible but it is not often performed because
    primary lesions are transitory
  • T. pallidum is difficult to visualize using
    bright field microscopy because of its extreme
    thinness it is a spirochete that resists
    staining with the usual microbiological dyes

15
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Diagnosis, direct exam
  • Dark field microscopic examination of fluid from
    the chancre is diagnostic but requires a
    well-trained microscopist
  • Direct fluorescent microscopic exam of the
    chancre fluid provides a more specific diagnosis
    but is not widely available

16
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Diagnosis since T. pallidum has never been
    cultured in vitro definitive diagnosis relies
    mostly on serological procedures
  • Nonspecific serology almost all infected
    individuals produce reaginic antibodies
    (directed against a normal phospholipid,
    cardiolipin) within a month of becoming infected

17
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Nonspecific serology the VDRL and RPR screening
    tests use an antigen made of cardiolipin,
    lecithin, and cholesterol which flocculate when
    bound by reagin the VDRL has been mostly
    replaced by the RPR because the latter uses a
    stable reagent, can be performed on serum or
    plasma, does not require a heat inactivation
    step, and does not have to be read microscopically

18
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Nonspecific serology patients with many other
    conditions may be reactive with the VDRL and RPR
    all reactive samples must be tested with a
    specific serologic test
  • Specific serology almost all patients with
    syphilis have antibodies directed against T.
    pallidum as well as antibodies directed against
    other treponemes that make up the normal
    indigenous microbiota

19
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Specific serology serum or plasma to be tested
    for T. pallidum specific antibodies must first be
    absorbed using a cultural suspension of
    nonpathogenic treponemes (Reiters strain) once
    absorbed the plasma or serum can be tested
    against a pathogenic T. pallidum (Nichols strain
    taken from infected rabbit testes lesions)

20
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Specific serology the Fluorescent Treponemal
    Antibody-Absorbed (FTA-ABS) is an indirect
    procedure that uses antihuman globulin conjugated
    with FITC the test is extremely specific and
    sensitive but somewhat tedious and requires a
    well trained microscopist the MHA-TP is a
    passive hemagglutination procedure

21
Genital Tract
  • Treponema pallidum
  • Specific serology the MHA-TP is easier to
    perform and much less tedious since reading the
    results does not a microscope it is as specific
    and sensitive as the FTA-ABS
  • The only reliable serologic test for diagnosing
    neurological syphilis is the VDRL

22
Genital Tract
  • Chlamydia trachomatis
  • Disease
  • Trachoma chronic eye infections in young
    children
  • Lymphogranuloma venereum transient genital
    ulcers in adults
  • Nongonococcal urethritis, cervicitis,
    salpingitis, and proctitis in adults
  • Newborn inclusion conjunctivitis

23
Genital Tract
  • Chlamydia trachomatis
  • Epidemiology
  • Trachoma person to person
  • Lymphogranuloma venereum and nongonococcal
    urethritis direct sexual contact
  • Newborn inclusion conjunctivitis acquired from
    infected mothers while giving birth

24
Genital Tract
  • Chlamydia trachomatis
  • Isolation this is an obligate intracellular
    bacterium (must have living cells for growth)
    may be cultured on cell cultures, embryonated
    eggs, or live laboratory animals special
    equipment and supplies, and specially trained
    personnel are required and are unavailable in
    most hospital labs

25
Genital Tract
  • Diagnosis can be made using DNA probes directly
    on the genital specimen (a bimodal DNA probe
    for C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae are
    routinely performed at LGH)
  • Cell cultures (McCoy cell line), serology, or
    other serological tests (e.g. complement
    fixation) are performed in reference labs

26
Genital Tract
  • Haemophilus ducreyi
  • Disease Chanchroid (soft chancre) penile and
    vaginal lesions satellite regional
    lymphadenitis with suppuration
  • Epidemiology sexually transmitted, most often in
    men of low socioeconomic groups more men become
    infected than women

27
Genital Tract
  • Haemophilus ducreyi
  • Direct examination Gram stain of aspirated
    material reveals gram-negative coccobacilli in
    tangled arrays (said to resemble a school of
    fish)
  • Isolation slow but definite growth on chocolate
    agar selective chocolate with fetal bovine serum
    plus vancomycin is optimal mature colonies may
    require 4-5 days (high humidity,CO2, 35oC)

28
Haemophilus ducreyiGram Stain of Soft Chancre
29
  • Haemophilus ducreyi

30
  • (chanchroid) tiny pleomorphic gram negative rod
  • When observed in gram stain of genital lesion it
    is said to resemble a school of fish
  • Requires X factor for growth grows on non-
    selective chocolate agar or chocolate agar
    supplemented with antibiotics in 3-5 days

31
  • Incubation requires high humidity and CO2
  • Identified biochemically like other Haemophilus
    species

32
Genital Tract
  • Bacterial vaginosis (common non-inflammatory
    malodorous genital discharge)
  • Etiology unknown, associated with the a
    preponderance of Gardnerella vaginalis
    (pleomorphic gram variable coccobacilli),
    Mobiluncus species (motile anaerobe) and various
    gram negative anaerobes

33
  • Diagnosis is usually not by culture but
    microscopic exam (clue cells and lack of
    lactobacillus morphotypes) or direct bedside
    procedures (fishy odor, pH greater than 6)

34
Genital Tract
  • Herpes virus (HSV-2) (genital herpes)
  • Like all viruses, this obligate intracellular
    parasite requires cell cultures or other special
    methods beyond the means of most hospitals
  • Lesions are painful and highly infectious

35
  • Sexually transmitted herpes infections include
    genital lesions in sexual partners and the eyes
    of neonates acquired from infected mothers
  • Diagnosis is usually by culture or serology for
    antibodies at reference labs

36
Genital Tract
  • Streptococcus agalactiae (Group B Strep) gram
    positive coccus in chains
  • Can be associated with urogenital infections but
    is also part of vaginal normal microbiota
  • Neonates can be acquired GBS during the birthing
    process and develop meningitis or septicemia
  • Enrichment broth (Lim) inoculated with
    vaginal/rectal swab and incubated 8 or more hours
    before subculture onto SBA

37
Genital Tract
  • Group B strep
  • Subcultured-SBA is examined for weak beta
    hemolytic colonies
  • Identification is most efficiently by passive
    agglutination (GBS antigen is first extracted
    from suspicious colonies and then tested with
    antibody coated latex particles)
  • GBS is also CAMP test positive
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