Curable sexually transmitted infection caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Aetiology
Causative organism:
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Microbiological characteristics:
- Gram-negative, kidney-shaped diplococci
- Intracellular (commonly found within neutrophils)
- Non-motile, non-spore forming
- Oxidase-positive
- Ferments glucose (not maltose)
Virulence factors (key in pathogenesis):
- Pili: adhesion to epithelial cells, antigenic variation → immune evasion
- Outer membrane proteins (PorB, Opa): invasion and immune resistance
- Lipooligosaccharide (LOS): endotoxin → inflammation
Pathophysiology
- Attachment of bacteria to mucosal epithelium via pili
- Penetration into epithelial cells
- Local multiplication and neutrophil recruitment
- Acute inflammation with purulent discharge
- Possible ascending spread or hematogenous dissemination
Importantly:
- No protective immunity → reinfection common
- Antigenic variation explains recurrent disease
Clinical presentation
Males
Gonococcal urethritis
- Incubation: 2–7 days
- Symptoms:
- Profuse, purulent, yellow-green urethral discharge
- Dysuria
- Urethral itching
- Examination:
- Meatal erythema
- Expressible pus
Females
Gonococcal cervicitis (often asymptomatic)
- Symptoms (if present):
- Vaginal discharge
- Intermenstrual or post-coital bleeding
- Dysuria
- Signs:
- Mucopurulent endocervical discharge
- Cervical friability
Venereology principle:
Females frequently serve as asymptomatic reservoirs, contributing to disease spread.
Investigations
Direct Microscopy
- Gram stain
- Intracellular gram-negative diplococci
- Highly sensitive in symptomatic males
- Less reliable in females and extragenital sites
Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests (NAATs)
- Gold standard
- High sensitivity and specificity
- Can test urine and swabs (urethral, cervical, rectal, pharyngeal)
Culture
- Required for:
- Antimicrobial resistance testing
- Uses Thayer-Martin or chocolate agar
Management
- First line: ceftriaxone 1G IM
- Second line: cefixime 400mg oral + azithromycin 2G (only if IM injection is contraindicated or refused by patient)
- Test of cure in all patients
Complications
Lower genital tract
- Bartholinitis
- Tysonitis
- Periurethral abscess
- Rectal abscess
- Epididymitis
- Urethral stricture
Upper genital tract
- Endometritis
- PID
- Hydrosalpinx
- Infertility
- Ectopic pregnancy
- Prostatitis