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Review from last lecture

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Title: Review from last lecture


1
Review from last lecture
  • Skin Infections
  • Contrasting Staph aureus with Strep pyogenes
  • Folliculitis, boils and carbuncles
  • Rocky mountain spotted fever (R. rickettsii)
  • Lyme disease (B. burgdorferi)
  • Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis)
  • Bacterial infections of Wounds
  • Tetanus (C. tetani)
  • Gangrene (C. perfringens)
  • Burn infections (P. auerginosa)
  • Actinomycosis (A. israelii)

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3
Sexually-transmitted Diseases
Denise Kirschner,PhD Dept of Micro/Immuno MICRO
532 Nov 29, 2001
4
Outline
  • Epidemiological principles of STDs
  • UTI/Bladder infections
  • Infections of mucosal surfaces
  • Neisseria gonorrhea and Chlamydia trachomatis
  • Ulcerative Infections
  • Syphilis (T. pallidium) and Chancroid (H. ducreyi)

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General uro-genital tract information
  • More female infections that males
  • Urine is sterile
  • Above bladder entrance-sterile, below lots of IM
    Lactobacillus, Staphylococcus, Cornybacterium,
    Haemophilus, Streptococcus, Bacteriodes
  • Urinary tract infections (UTI)
  • More than 100,000 bacteria/ml indicated
  • Bladder infection
  • Catherization is the major cause of infection
    (usually IM)
  • Intercourse (for women)

7
Sexually-transmitted Diseases
Mucosal infections
Proliferative infections
papillomavirus
gonorrhea
chlamydia
Systemic infections
HIV
Ulcerative infections
hepatitis B
herpes simplex
syphilis
chancroid
LGV
8
Epidemiologic Principles of STDs
9
Occurrence of STDs in the U.S.
Disease Incidence Prevalence
--
Chlamydia
4,000,000
--
Gonorrhea
1,400,000
Papillomavirus
800,000
45,000,000
Herpes simplex
300,000
30,000,000
Syphilis (primary)
50,000

(all stages)
100,000
100,000
HIV
70,000
1,500,000
Chancroid
4,000
?
10
Trends in common STDs
500
400
chlamydia
gonorrhea
syphilis
300
chancroid
200
60
40
100
20
0
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
1995
1980
1990
1995
Year
Note 60 of all N. gonorrhea infection are ages
15-24
11
Determinants of STD Morbidity
  • Rate of transmission
  • Sexual behavior (rate of new partner acquisition)
  • Duration of infectivity

12
Factors That Affect the Transmission of STDs
Age
Gender
Genetic susceptibility
Sexual practices
Contraceptive and "hygienic" practices
Circumcision
13
Determinants of the Duration of Infectivity in
STDs
  • Etiologic agent
  • tendency to asymptomatic carriage
  • antimicrobial resistance
  • Access and utilization of the health care system
  • Compliance with therapy
  • Contact tracing

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Theoretical Structure of an STD Core Group
16
PPNG in Colorado Springs, Dec. 1989 - Dec. 1991
- not gang-related
- gang-related
C A S E S
D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D
17
PPNG Outbreak, Colorado Spgs., 1989-91
  • 56 cases in a 2-year period
  • Traced to a network of 578 persons
  • 410 (218 males and 192 females) were affiliated
    with a street gang that moved to the area in May
    1988.
  • Mean age females (19.7 yrs) males (21.5 yrs)
  • Prominent behaviors among females multiple
    partners, heavy crack use, drugs for sex

18
CO-INFECTIONS
19
Relevance of STD Co-infections
  • May identify a core group member
  • i.e., a "sentinel event"
  • STDs increase transmission of HIV
  • ulcerative and mucosal infections only
  • Effect of HIV on expression of STDs
  • accelerates HPV-associated tumors
  • facilitates spread of gonococcus
  • alters the natural course of syphilis
  • Presumptive therapy
  • 80-90 of college men with 1 STD have others (50
    with Chlamydia)

20
Infections of mucosal surfaces
21
Infections caused by gonococci and chlamydiae
  • urethritis
  • cervicitis
  • epididymitis
  • proctitis
  • pharyngitis
  • eye infection


gtgt
gt
22
Epidemiologic characteristics of chlamydial and
gonococcal infections
GONOCOCCUS CHLAMYDIA
PATIENT AGE SEXUAL HISTORY ASX
INFECTION (male) ASX INFECTION (female)
teenagers gt young adults usually acquired
from a recent contact 5 of
infected males ( higher in some areas)
50 - 80 of infected females
teenagers gt young adults may have been
acquired in the remote past 50 of
infected sexual partners 50 of
infected sexual partners
ASXasymptomatic
23
Microbiology of gonorrhea
  • Strict human pathogen
  • Gram-negative diplococcus
  • Adherent- pilus (antigenic variation)
  • IgA protease (cleaves IgA)
  • Oxidase-positive
  • Fastidious growth
  • Modified Thayer-Martin media (VCN)

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Virulence determinants of Neisseria gonorrhoeae
  • pilus colonization factor--gt antigenic variation
  • opa proteins-------------------gt phase variation
  • lipooligosaccharide---------gtantigenic variation
  • IgA1 protease
  • transferrin/lactoferrin binding proteins
  • intracellular environment?

26
Treatment of gonococcal infections
  • PPNG
  • Tetracycline resistance
  • Quinolone resistance
  • Single-dose treatment options for uncomplicated
    disease
  • 1944 105 units of penicillin
  • 1970 107 units
  • Resistance (R plasmids)
  • PPNG strain

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28
Microbiology of Chlamydia trachomatis
  • Obligate intracellular bacteria
  • Not G/G- (lacks part of LPS)
  • Complex, 2-stage life cycle
  • Elementary body (spore like)
  • Reticulated body (vegetative like)
  • Treatment antibiotics tetracyclines (not
    penicillin-why?)

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31
Chlamydial infections
  • urethritis (NGU)
  • epididymitis
  • proctitis
  • mucopurulent cervicitis
  • pelvic inflammatory disease
  • trachoma (serotypes A-C)
  • LGV (L1, L2, L3)

32
50-60 of women with infertility have serologic
evidence of chlamydia or gonococcus, but no
history of symptoms!
33
Ulcerative infections
34
Frequency of genital ulcer infections
HSVgtgtsyphilisgtgtchancroid
35
Distinguishing features of genital ulcers
  • anatomical location
  • multiplicity
  • pain
  • induration

36
Microbiology of syphilis
  • Treponema pallidum
  • spirochete -- labile spiral bacterium with axial
    filaments
  • man is the only recognized host
  • non-cultivable
  • Gram-negative like

37
T. pallidum darkfield examination
38
reactive cases
iary ge
39
Manifestations of 1 Syphilis
  • Chancre (may be unnoticed)
  • painless, but tender
  • indurated
  • highly contagious
  • rapid dissemination
  • motility of the organism?
  • Congenital
  • MANIFESTATIONS OF SECONDARY SYPHILIS
  • Rash
  • Lesions
  • mucous patches
  • Fever

40
Natural history of secondary syphilis
spontaneous resolution
1/3
Secondary infection
1/3
infected without clinical disease
1/3
tertiary syphilis Neurosyphilis DTH Organisms
rare
41
Syphilis- principles of treatment
  • T. pallidum is exquisitely sensitive to
    penicillin
  • Dosing and penicillin formulation used depends on
    the stage of the disease

42
Microbiology of chancroid
  • Haemophilus ducreyi
  • Gram-negative coccobacilli
  • fastidious and labile
  • Diagnosis is usually clinical, by exclusion of
    other agents of genital ulcers

43
Epidemiology and treatment of chancroid
  • CDC reported a 10-fold increase in incidence from
    1978 - 1987
  • 10 of patients are co-infected with either HSV
    or T. pallidum
  • Males gtgt females
  • Occurs in sustained, urban outbreaks
  • Associated with female commercial sex workers and
    sex-for-drugs trade
  • TREATMENT sensitive to ceftriaxone or
    azithromycin in single dose
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