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Sexual Health in the Surgery. Dr. Simon Benson ST2. Main topics. Discharge Dysuria Dyspareunia Erectile Dysfunction Genital Dermatology Anal Symptoms. The Sexual History. Current sexual partner Recent (6/12) sexual partners Nature of relationship Gender of partner
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Sexual Health in the Surgery Dr. Simon Benson ST2
Main topics • Discharge • Dysuria • Dyspareunia • Erectile Dysfunction • Genital Dermatology • Anal Symptoms
The Sexual History • Current sexual partner • Recent (6/12) sexual partners • Nature of relationship • Gender of partner • Nature of intercourse • Contraception? • Partner symptoms • Date of LMP, length, regularity
Vaginal Discharge • 95% caused by 5 causes: • Excessive normal secretions • BV • Candida • Cervicitis (Gonorrhoeal, Chlamydial, Herpetic) • TV
Vaginal Discharge • BV • Vaginal flora change • Not sexually transmitted • Affects up to 40% of women • Associated with complications post partem • White offensive discharge • 50% remit by self • Can treat with metronidazole po / clindamycin topically
Vaginal Discharge • Candida • Fungal infection • Predisposing factors: Cushings / Addisons, DM, pregnancy, steroids, Antibiotics • Pruritis • Thick, creamy, non offensive • Treat if symptomatic – clotrimazole.
Vaginal Discharge • Chlamydia • Screening – urine testing, self test • Men usually asymptomatic (may have urethritis) • Women (>70% asymptomatic) – discharge (mucopurulent), PCB / IMB / PID, dysuria • Examination – Discharge, tender, bleeding cervix, tender adnexae, cervical excitation • Doxycycline 100mg bd for 7/7, azithromycin 1g po once
Vaginal Discharge • Gonorrhoea • Men (50% acute infections asymtpomatic) – urethritis, prostatitis, urethral stricture, arthritis • Women: PID, miscarriage, preterm labour. • Ceftriaxone 250mg IM • Ciprofloxacin 500mg PO
Vaginal Discharge • Trichomonas Vaginalis • Men: 15-50% asymptomatic – dysuria / urethral discharge. • Women: 10-50% are asymtpomatic – copious mucopurulent yellow smelly (fishy) discharge, itchy • Metronidazole (patient and partner)
Herpes • Direct contact with lesions • Appear anywhere on skin or mucosa • Painful red genital ulcers which crust over and heal. • Last 3-4 weeks • Major complication is urinary retention • URGENT referral to gynae, never catheterise
Herpes • Contact tracing • Aciclovir treatment if <5days • Analgesia • Reactivation is less severe • Neonatal herpes is a paediatric emergency
Genital Warts • Caused by HPV • Can be asymptomatic • Warts caused by HPV 6 or 11 (90%) • Females – vulval or introitus • Males – Penis or Anus • Treat with podophyllotoxin or imiquimod • Barrier contraception for 3/12 after warts gone. • Alternatives – cryo, electocautery, excision
HPV Vaccination • Prevent infection from strains causing cervical cancer (HPV 16, 18) • Some cover HPV 6 and 11 • Needed before sexual activity (12-14yo) • Still need cervical smears as not protective against all strains causing cervical cancer
Syphilis • Up 3000% on three years ago • Refer all cases to specialist care • Primary – Chancre at site of contact • Secondary – Systemic symptoms 4-8/52 later (fever, malaise, lymph, anal papules) • Tertiary - Granulomas in connective tissue occur 2-20years after initial infection • Quaternary – Cardio / Neuro complications
Hepatitis B • Common globally • Spread via sex, blood, mother to baby • High risk groups • 85% recover fully, 10% carriers, 5% chronic hepatitis • Treatment is initially supportive but chronic hepatitis uses interferon and lamivudine
Hepatitis C • Also common • Less likely to spread via sexual intercourse but possible • Antibody detectable at 4months, PCR sooner • Needs specialist referral • 50% recover, 15% develop hepatoma, 5% develop cirrhosis
HIV • Retrovirus affecting Th cells • 1 in 3 patients affected in UK are unaware • Risk of transmission is low (1:1000 exposures) • 70% is sexual transmission • Antibodies take 3 months to develop • Prophylaxis available if accidental exposure
When to test? • Signs of HIV • Routine screen • Patient request • Identified risk • Infected sexual partner • IVDU as partner • Patient from high risk area • MSM • Multiple partners • Surgical procedure in high risk country
Arranging the test • Is primary care appropriate? • Pre-test counselling • Need for repeats (<3/12) • Other tests needed? • Consent • Make follow up appt for results • Discuss barrier contraception to prevent new risk
Contraception • Lots of methods • Sterilisation • Implant • IUS • COCP • POP • IUCD • Barriers • Natural methods • Emergency
Emergency Contraception • <72hrs after unprotected intercourse • Levonorgesterel 1.5mg • If vomits within 3hrs, give another dose with antiemetic • If on enzyme inducing drugs consider coil or higher dose • Efficacy • 0-24hr – 95% • 24-48hr – 85% • 48-72hr – 58%
Emergency Contraception • < 5days after unprotected intercourse • Insert copper IUCD • Efficacy is >99% • Return if abdo pain, late period, further contraceptive advice needed
COCP • Contain oestrogen and progestogen • Associated with risks • Coronary artery disease 15 per 1000 (higher in smokers) • Stroke 1 in 1000 (higher in smokers) • VTE 0.05 in 1000 • Breast cancer 20 per 1000 • Cervical cancer 0.1 per 1000 (higher with longer term use)
COCP • Risk outweighs benefit if: • Smoker >35 or Non smoker >50 • BMI >30 • BP >140/90 • PMHx of cardiovascular disease • PMHx of VTE • Focal migraine • Vascular complications of DM • Female malignancy • Liver disease
Initiation of COCP • History (medical and sexual) • Check BP • Discuss risks and side effects • Consider smoking cessation advice • Consider thrombophilia screen if FHx of VTE (<45yo) or cholesterol if FHx of MI (<450yo)
COCP • Effective immediately if: • Taken on days 1-3 of cycle • End of 3rd week post partem • < 7days after miscarriage/TOP • Follow up • 3/12 – Check side effects and BP, risk factors • 6/12 thereafter
Missed pills • If < 2 pills missed, no additional contraception needed • If > 3, need to use condoms or abstain for 7 days • If pills missed in week 1 consider emergency contraception • If pills missed in week 3 omit pill free break • Nb if POP, need extra contraception for 2days
Reasons to stop immediately • Severe sudden CP • Sudden SOB • Calf pain • Acute abdominal pain • Severe headache • Hepatitis • BP >160/100 • Prolonged immobility after surgery
Use with antibiotics • If <3 week course • Use additional contraceptive methods • Continue for 7 days after • Omit next pill free interval • If enzyme inducer • Use additional contraceptive methods • Continue for 4 weeks after
Contraception to Under 16s • Can give without parental consent if: • In best interest • Sufficient maturity to understand moral, social and emotional implications • Cannot be persuaded to inform parents • Likely to begin sexual intercourse without • Likely to suffer if no advice given
Choices for under 16s • Condoms (higher failure rate) • COCP (needs compliance) • Implants (2nd line) • IUCD (Can be hard to insert) • Morning after pill (not suitable as regular)
Erectile Dysfunction • 50% men aged 40-70 experience problems • Organic causes account for 80% • CVS • DM • Neurological • Smoking • Side effects of drugs (BP, SSRIs)
Treatment options • Viagra • Apomorphine • Intraurethral preparations • Vacuum devices • Penile prosthesis • Androgen supplements • Psychotherapy
Viagra • The little blue pill • Prescribable on NHS if • Prostate cancer • Kidney failure • Spinal cord lesion • DM • MD • PD • Polio • Already receiving on 14/09/1998 • Severe psychological distress