Pathogenesis
- Causes disease only in humans. Transmitted sexually both in males and females.
Once inside the body the gonococci attach to the microvilli of mucosal cells by means of pili and protein II, which function as adhesins. This attachment prevents the bacteria from being washed away by normal cervical and vaginal discharges or by the flow of urine They are then phagocytosed by the mucosal cells and transported through the intercellular spaces and subepithelial tissue.
Incubation period of 2-8 days.
Phagocytes, such as neutrophils, also may contain gonococci inside vesicles. Because the gonococci are intracellular at this time, the host’s defenses have little effect on the bacteria. Following penetration of the bacteria, the host tissue responds locally by the accumulation of mast cells, more PMNs (polymorphonuceleocytes), and anitbody-secreting plasma cells. These cells are later replaced by fibrous tissue that may lead to urethral closing, or stricture, in males
Gonococci causes both localized infections, usually in the genital tract, and disseminated infections – Mainly
1. Gonorrhea & Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID).
2. Neonatal conjunctivitis (ophthalmia neonatorum)
Gonorrhea
Gonorrhoea in men is characterized primarily by urethritis with mucopurulent discharge containing gonococci in large numbers, accompanied by dysuria (painful urination). Chronic urethritis lead to stricture formation. Other complications include epididymitis, prostatitis (painful condition that involves inflammation of the prostate), peri-urethral abscesses and “water can perineum” with multiple discharging sinuses.
:
(Epididymitis -
inflammation of the epididymis, which is a tube located at the back of the
testicles that stores and carries sperm
Stricture -narrowing of
the urethra which restricts or slows the flow of urine in)
Gonorrhoea in women, infection is located primarily in the urethra and endocervix
(cervicitis), causing a purulent vaginal discharge
and inter-menstrual bleeding. Vaginal mucosa is not usually affected due to
acidic pH. Infection may extend to Bartholin’s
glands ( glands located near
the opening of the vagina which secrete mucus to lubricate the vagina), endometrium
and fallopean tubes. The most frequent complication in women is an
ascending infection of the uterine tubes (Salphingitis
(inflammation of the fallopian tubes) and Pelvic
Inflammatory Disease), which can result in sterility or ectopic
pregnancy as a result of scarring of tissues.
Rarely, peritonitis and peri-hepatic inflammation
is seen (Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome).
Also, Proctitis (inflammation of the anus and the lining of the rectum),
conjunctivitis (due to
autoinoculation) and rarely, blood invasion leading to arthritis, ulcerative
endocarditis, or meningitis
Non-venereal
infections/ Disseminated infections- Disseminated
gonococcal infections occurs via the blood stream. Septicemia, infections of skin and joints in
1-3 % of women (arthralgia/ arthritis) - more common in women due to untreated
symptomatic infections.
In newborns, gonococcal
ophthalmia in the newborn, due to direct infection during passage through
birth canal (vertical transmission)
Ophthalmia neonatorum/ gonococcal ophthalmia - An eye infection which may develop within 2/3 days of vaginal delivery, affects cornea and can cause blindness, purulent conjunctivitis, acquired at delivery. This was once a leading cause of blindness in many parts of the world (now controlled by the practice of administering 1% silver nitrate solution into the eyes of all newborns)
Opthalmia neonatorum
§ To obtain a urethral specimen, swab is inserted
approximately 2cm in urethra and rotated gently before withdrawing.
§ If there is profuse urethral discharge in male, it can be
collected without inserting the swab.
§ A few drops of first voided urine can be used in males, but the sensitivity is low compared to discharge.
Transport: Swabs collected for isolation of gonococci may be transported to the laboratory in modified Staurt’s or Amie’s charcoal transport media and held at room temperature until inoculated to culture media. Good recovery of gonococci is possible if swabs are cultured within 12 hours of collection.
- Gram Staining
For
men,
a gram-stained smear of urethral discharge (exudate) showing intracellular
Gram-negative diplococci is diagnostic.
Women may
carry normal vaginal flora such as Veillonella or occasional gram-negative coccobacilli,
may resemble gonococci. In case of women use of fluorescent antibody techniques
for identification to increase sensitivity and microscopy for specifity.
- Culture
Specimens inoculated on a pre-warmed plate,
immediately after collection, if not possible, collect on charcoal impregnated
swabs and transport to laboratory on appropriate medium.
In acute gonorrhea, Chocolate agar/Mueller Hinton agar
inoculated with the sample, incubation at 35-36oC, under 5-10% CO2
In chronic cases, where mixed infection can be seen,
use selective media like, Thayer Martin
Medium {Chocolate agar containing antibiotics - vancomycin, colistin,
trimethoprim, and nystatin or Modified
Newyork City Medium (MNC) .
- ·
Oxidase Test: Positive
- ·
Ferments glucose but not maltose, sucrose
or lactose
- ·
DNase Test: Negative
- · Beta-galactosidase (ONPG) Test: Negative
Serological
Tests
- Precipitation, complement fixation test, passive agglutination, immunofluorescence, radioimmunoassay etc-
- Not useful for diagnosis- it becomes positive only some weeks after infection is established, can remain positive for months/years afterwards. Can show positive with meningococcal infection.
- Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) is also used as a rapid test and is sensitive to gonorrhea.
- Molecular Diagnosis:
- PCR method or Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests (NAATs) to detect the presence of gonococcal nucleic acids in patient specimens- highly sensitive and specific.
- Gonorrhea nucleic acid amplification (NAAT) testing-detects DNA of the gonococci and is considered the optimal test for gonorrhea infection- on a urine sample or a swab taken from a site of potential infection
- Initially sulphonamides and penicillin but there was
rapid development and spreading of drug resistance especially by Penicillinase
producing Neisseria gonorrhoeae.
- Now, Cefixime/Ceftriaxone or Ciprofloxacin with Doxycycline treatment for 7 days/Erythromycn single oral dose
- Prophylaxis
The prevention of gonorrhea involves the use
of safety measures and the immediate treatment of symptomatic patients and
their contacts.
- ·
Early detection of cases
- ·
Contact tracing
- ·
Health education
- ·
No vaccination (no immunity even by clinical
infection)
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