Title: A1262163605JXUzR
1Bacterial Diseases
of Man
2Bacterial Diseases of the Skin
- Boils, pimples, abscess, acne (p. 582)
- Impetigo (p. 585)
- Pseudomonas Infections (p. 586)
3Boils, pimples, abscesses
- Staphylococcus aureus and epidermidis
- Gram coccus,
- b-hemolytic, catalase coagulase positive
- Leukotoxin
- Can develop into bacteremia
- Toxic Shock Syndrome
4Impetigo
- Streptococcus pyogenes
- Gram cocci, chains
- b-hemolytic, M protein Anti-phagocytic,
- streptokinase dissolves blood clots, heart
attacks - hyaluronidase- dissolves tissue cement
5Pseudomonas Infections
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Gram aerobic, rod
- Produces pyocyanin green toxin, kills cells.
- Co-infection with C. perfringins can lead to gas
gangrene. - Opportunistic pathogen for burn patients.
- Resistant to many antibiotics
- Rx fluoroquinolones
6Acne
- Propionibacter acnes
- Diphtheroid, anaerobe
- Gram rod,
- 17 million cases
- Breaks down sebum to glycerol for energy
metabolism. - OTC- benzoyl peroxide
- Rx tetracycline, doxycycline, Retin A, accutane
(reduces sebum)
7Bacterial Diseases of the Nervous System
- Bacterial meningitis (p.603)
- Other meningitis (p.604)
- Listerosis (p.606)
- Tetanus (p. 607)
- Botulism (p.608)
- Leprosy (p.610)
8Bacterial Meningitis
- Hemophilus influenzae
- Gram rod, aerobe
- Oral- air borne transmission
- Part of normal flora
- Esp. common in young children
- Starts as sore throat, to blood, and then to CNS.
- In blood bacteremia, sepsis
- Inflames meninges- fever, severe headache, coma,
death in 24-48 hrs. endotoxic shock. - Rx erythromycin, (penicillin cant cross BBB)
cephalosporins. - Vaccine- 2, 4 , 6 months. (Hib)
9Bacterial Meningitis
- Neisseria meningitidis
- Gram diplococcus, aerobe
- Oral- air borne transmission
- 5-10 carriers
- Starts as sore throat, to blood, and then to CNS.
- In blood bacteremia, sepsis
- Inflames meninges- fever, severe headache, coma,
death in 24-48 hrs. endotoxic shock. - Rx erythromycin, (penicillin cant cross BBB)
cephalosporins. - Vaccine- military primarily.
10Other Meningitis
- Streptococcal meningitis
- S. pyogenes
- Hospitalized older adults.
- Diagnosis
- Spinal tap, measure glucose
- 90 -120 mg/dl normal
- If lower, suspect bacteria
- If normal, suspect viral
- Gram stain sometimes useful
- Latex agglutination- 20 min
11Listerosis
- Listeria monocytogenes
- Gram rod
- Grows in macrophages, CNS
- mostly affects pregnant women cancer patients.
- Can cross placenta and cause fetal death.
- Mainly food-borne infections
- Poultry, dairy products.
- Grows at 4C
- Rx penicillin
12Tetanus
- Clostridium tetani
- Gram anaerobic, rod
- Usually wound infection.
- Produces potent neurotoxin, tetanospasmin.
- Toxin enters CNS and blocks relaxation pathway
causing a spasmotic paralysis. - Masseter greatly affected- lockjaw.
- Later stages uncontrollable spasms
opisthotonos.
13Tetanus
- Clostridium tetani
- Vaccine- part of DPT- tetanus toxoid. Booster
every 10 years with no incidents, or every 5 if
have injury. - Can also administer anti-toxin antibodies (TIG)
14Botulism
- Clostridium botulinum
- Gram anaerobic, rod
- Usually food-borne.
- Produces potent neurotoxin.
- Toxin enters CNS and blocks ACh to motor neurons
causing a flaccid paralysis. - 1 mg kills 60 million mice.. Death due to cardiac
and respiratory failure (diaphram). - Nausea, no fever, blurred vision, difficulty
swallowing.
15Botulism
- Clostridium botulinum
- Toxin types
- A, - USA, 60-70 mortality. 20-30 cases/ yr.
- B, - European, 25 mortality.
- E seafood, 40 mortality.
- Infant botulism- honey due to immature GI
tract ID 2000 spores or organisms. - Botox- used cosmetically.
16Leprosy
- Mycobacterium leprae
- Acid fast rod 30C optimum growth
- Grows in pheripheral nerves.
- Cannot cultivate on lab media- can in armadillos,
rat foot-pads. - Tuberculoid - (neural form) loose feeling,
sensation.
17Leprosy
- Mycobacterium leprae
- Lepromatous - (progressive) infects skin cells
deformation of hands. - Not very contageous, requires long intimate
contact. - Incubation -years.
- Death from complications.
- Many Biblical descriptions probably fungal
dematidis. - 100-150 cases/ yr 500,000 worldwide.
- Rx dapsone, rifampin, clofamizine
18Diseases of the Cardiovascular System
- Septicemia (p. 626)
- Tularemia (p.629)
- Brucellosis (p. 630)
- Anthrax (p. 631)
- Gangrene (p. 631)
- Plague (p. 633)
- Relapsing Fever (p. 634)
- Lymes Disease (p. 634)
- Typhus (p. 635)
- Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (p.637)
19Septicemia
- Pathogens usually dont grow in blood
lymphocytes and low Fe3 - Lymphangitis- inflammation of lymph nodes.
- Sepsis- toxic condition from septicemia.
- Septic Shock - endotoxin, 1 millionth of a gm.
20Puerperal Sepsis
- Disease of Childbirth
- Semmelweis 1840s
- Disinfection procedures.
- Streptococcus pyogenes.
- Rx penicillin.
21Endocarditis
- Inflammation of the inner heart lining.
- Acute- S. aureus.
- Rapid destruction of heart valves leads to death.
- Rx penicillin.
22Rheumatic Fever
- Repeated infections with S. pyogenes -strep
throat. - Ages 4 - 18.
- Joint pain.
- Streptococal antigens (M protein) cross react
with heart antigens. - Antibody response to kill organisms damages heart.
23Tularemia
- Franciella tularensis
- Gram - pleomorphic rod.
- Oral, dermal, or ingestion transmission.
- Rabbits, squirrels
- Small ulcer at primary site of infection.
- 1 week - lymph nodes enlarge.
- Can progress to septicemia, pneumonia.
- ID50 -10 organisms.
- Survives inside phagocytes. Endotoxin.
- Rx streptomycin, gentamycin.
24Brucellosis
- Brucella abortus
- Gram - rod
- Cattle, swine
- Direct contact, milk products.
- Infects uterus- mesoerythritol requirement.
25Brucellosis
- Brucella abortus
- Chills, fever, malaise, heavy sweating.
- Undulating- fever rises in evening 104C.
- Animals secrete bacteria in milk.
- Pasteurization process tailored for this
pathogen. - Organism survives phagocytosis, grows
intracellularly. - Rx tetracycline streptomycin -long treatment.
26Anthrax
- Bacillus anthracis
- Gram rod, aerobe, sporeformer.
- Grows in long chains - square ends.
- Direct contact, wool, aerosol -spores.
- Spores survive for decades.
- Pustule forms at primary site.
27Anthrax
- Bacillus anthracis
- Pulmonary form most serious, enters lungs then to
bloodstream, leads to septicemia. - Pathogenic factors include anti-phagocytic
capsule (poly-D-glutamic acid) potent exotoxin. - Once septicemic, death in 48-72 hours.
- Rx penicillin.
- Vaccine - 6 inj. over 18 months.
- BT agent. Refined spores.
28Gas Gangrene
- Clostridium perfringens
- Gram rod, anaerobe (not strict), sporeformer.
- Ischemia -lack of blood supply.
- Necrosis -tissue death.
- Gangrene -death of soft tissue.
- Diabetes, injury, cancer.
29Gas Gangrene
- Many proteolytic enzymes, hyaluronidase,
collagenase, lipases. - P. aeruginosa can co-infect.
- Treatment - remove necrotic tissue, amputation,
surgical maggots. - Hyperbaric O2 - internal tissues
- Rx penicillin.
- Clostridium perfringens
- Produces toxins that travel down muscle bundles.
30Vector Borne Diseases - Plague
- Ysernia pestis
- Gram - rod.
- Zoonoses, disease of rodents (squirrels, prairie
dogs) spread by rat flea. - 14 -15th Centuries killed 25 of entire European
population. - Organism enters blood via bite and can grow in
phagocytes.
31Bubonic Plague (Black death)
- Ysernia pestis
- Organism enters blood via bite and spreads to
lymph nodes creating a bubos. - Septicemia causes septic shock.
- Death occurs in a week.
- 50-75 Mortality if untreated.
- Can go pneumonic -death can occur in 15 -24
hours. - Rx streptomycin, tetracycline.
32Plague
- Distribution in US.
- N. Mexico highest.
- Vaccine - live attenuated strain.
- Short-lived immunity.
- BT agent ?? Limited.
33Relapsing Fever
- Borrelia recurrensis
- Spirochete - no Gram reaction.
- Spread by soft ticks.
- Fever, jaundice, rose-colored skin spots.
- Fever breaks after 3-4 days and patient appears
to recover. - Fever reappears due to surface antigens changing.
- Rx penicillin.
34Lymes Disease
- Borrelia burgdorferi
- Spirochete - no Gram reaction.
- Spread by hard ticks.
- Organisms infects tick salivary glands.
- 10,000 cases annually -most prevalent ABD.
- Rodents reservoir. Deer in life cycle of tick.
35Lymes Disease
36Lymes Disease
- Borrelia burgdorferi
- Bulls -eye rash -erythema migrans around bite.
- Flu-like symptoms follow.
- Later stages similar to syphilis - heart and
neurological involvement. - Joint degeneration.
- Rx penicillin.
37Endemic Typhus
- Rickettsia prowazekii
- Obligate intracellular parasite.
- Spread by body louse.
- Organism grows in louse gut and is excreted in
feces. - Introduced in body when host scratches site and
rubs in feces. - Produces high and prolonged fever, and severe
headache. - Subcutaneous red spots indicate hemorrhagic
response.
38Endemic Typhus
- Rickettsia prowazekii
- Disease peaks after 12-14 days.
- Rx chloramphenicol and tetracycline.
- Vaccine available for military.
- Typhus killed Anne Frank and about 30 of
Napoleons army retreating from Moscow.
39Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
- Rickettsia rickettsii
- Obligate intracellular parasite.
- Spread by ticks.
- 800 cases / yr.
- 3 Mortality
- Fever, chills, headache, nausea.
40Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
- Rickettsia rickettsii
- 2-4 days rash starts on palms and soles.
- After 1 week, rash spreads over entire body.
- Mistaken frequently for measles but presence on
palms of hands and soles of feet (uncommon). - Kidney and heart failure leads to death.
41Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
- Rickettsia rickettsii
- Rx chloramphenicol and tetracycline.
- No vaccine.
42Diseases of the Respiratory System
- Strep Throat (p. 659 )
- Scarlet Fever (p. 659 )
- Diphtheria (p. 660 )
- Otidis media (p. 661 )
- Pertussis (p. 663 )
- TB (p. 663 )
- Pneumonias (p. 667 )
- Legionaires Disease (p. 669 )
43Steptococcal Pharyngitis
- Streptococcus pyogenes
- Gram cocci, chains
- b-hemolytic, M protein makes resistant to
phagocytosis. - Streptokinase, streptolysin.
- Culture from throat swab.
- Local infection, sore throat, fever.
- Can progress to otidis media.
- Rx penicillin.
44Scarlet Fever
- Streptococcus pyogenes
- Invades upper respiratory tract.
- Erythrogenic toxin produces small goose bumps
on skin - spreads over entire body except face,
palms, and soles to make red rash. - High fever, nausea, vomiting.
- Rx penicillin.
45Diphtheria
- Corynebacterium diphtheriae
- Gram pleomorphic rods
- Club shaped, chinese characters.
- Colonizes throat.
- Produces pseudomembrane on back of throat.
- Can block breathing.
46Diphtheria
- Corynebacterium diphtheriae
- Produces potent toxin that inhibits protein
synthesis. - Give anti-toxin.
- Rx penicillin, erythromycin.
- Vaccine DPT -2, 4, 6 months.
47Otidis media
- Earache.
- S. pneumoniae 35
- H. influenzae 20-30
- M. catarrhalis 10-15
- S. pyogenes 8-10
- S. aureus 1-2
- 85 under age of 3
- Eustacian tube S-shaped.
- Rx amoxicillin, sulfa drugs.
48Pertussis (Whooping cough)
- Bordetella pertusis
- Gram - obligate aerobe, capsulated,
coccobacillus. - Destroys cillary cells.
- Cytotoxin.
- Whoop comes from sound of patient gasping for air
between coughs. - Vaccination -DPT has reduced number from 250,000
to 7000. - Immunity lasts 12 yrs.
- Rx erythromycin.
49Tuberculosis (consumption)
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Acid -fast rod, in filaments (myco -fungus).
- Air-borne, sputum.
- Enters lung, reaches alveoli.
- Macrophages wall off into a tubercle in healthy
people. - When immune system weakens or fails they can
reinfect lungs.
50Tuberculosis
51Tuberculosis
52Tuberculosis
- Symptoms include coughing, rusty (blood) sputum,
weight loss. - Diagnosis
- X-ray, tuberculin test
- Tuberculin indicates exposure , not necessarily
active disease. - Culture, PCR faster.
- MAIS - AIDS patients.
- Rx isoniazid, rifampicin, streptomycin.
53Tuberculosis
- 10 - 12 million Americans infected.
- 2000 deaths, in decline.
- 3 million die world-wide.
54Bacterial pneumonias
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Gram diplococcus, capsulated.
- Infects bronchi and alveoli.
- High fever, difficulty breathing, chest pains.
- Lungs fill with fluid.
- Sometimes progresses to septicemia and
meningitis. - Rx penicillin.
55Bacterial pneumonias
- Hemophilus influenzae
- Rx cephalosporins.
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae
- Atypical walking pneumoniae
- No cell wall
- Low grade fever, headache, cough
- Colonies fried eggappearance.
- Rx tetracycline.
- Chlamydia pneumoniae
- OIP, needs ATP.
- Associated w atherosclerosis
- Rx tetracycline.
56Legionaires Disease
- Legionella pneumophila
- Gram - rod, aerobic, non-sporeformer.
- Occurs in nature, water. Resistant to chlorine.
- Enters lung via aerosol.
- High fever, other symptoms of pneumonia.
- Rx erythromycin.
57Legionaires Disease
58Diseases of the Digestive System
- Caries (p. 686 )
- Peridontal Disease (p. 688 )
- Food poisoning (p. 690 )
- Dysentery (p. 691 )
- Typhoid Fever (p. 695 )
- Cholera (p. 695 )
- E. coli (p. 697)
- Peptic ulcers (p. 697)
59Caries
- Streptococcus mutans
- Gram cocci
- Requires sucrose to make dextran cement.
- Binds to teeth, secretes acid to etch enamel.
60Caries
- Best prevention minimize sucrose ingestion
brush and floss use of fluorides. - No Rx , no vaccine.
61Peridontal Disease
- Treponema denticola (relative of pallidum)
- Over 300 organisms in oral cavity.
- Infects gingiva around teeth, causes gum
inflammation - gingivitis. retardation and
ulceration.
62Peridontal Disease
- Continual gingivitis leads to peridontidis.
- Retardation, ulceration and disintrigation of
gums. - Porphyromonas
- Prevotella
- Remove infected tissue.
- Rx oxidizing agents, metroniazole.
63GI Diseases
- Intoxication- ingest toxin.
- Infection -pathogenesis due to organism.
64Staphylococcal Poisoning
- Staphylococcus aureus - enterotoxin.
- Custards, cream pies, potato salad, ham.
- 106 organisms.
- Toxin is heat stable
- 30 min boiling.
- Incubation 4-6 hrs.
- Causes nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps,
diarrhea.
65Shigellosis (Bacillary Dysentery)
- Shigella dysentariae
- Gram - facultative anaerobe rod, enteric.
- ID50 lt100 organisms.
- 20,000 -30,000 cases/ yr.
- 5-15 deaths
- 20 mortality if untreated.
66Shigellosis (Bacillary Dysentery)
- Shigella dysentariae
- Enters mucosa, infect cells, cytotoxic (Shiga
toxin). - Symptoms, fever, severe diarrhea with blood and
mucus, abdominal cramps. - Rarely invades bloodstream.
- Culture from stool.
- Treatment- rehydration.
- Rx fluoroquinolones.
67Salmonellosis (Salmonella Gastroenteritis)
- Salmonella typhimurium
- Gram - fac. anaerobe rod, enteric.
- ID50 104 - 105 organisms.
- 40-50,000 reported may be as high as 2 million
- 500-2000 deaths.
- Incubation- 12-36 hrs.
- Common eggs, poultry products.
68Salmonellosis (Salmonella Gastroenteritis)
- Spread from mucosa to lymph nodes.
- Symptoms include fever, nausea, cramps, diarrhea.
- Recovered from feces.
- Mortality 1 mainly in very young and old.
- No Rx . Rehydration.
69Typhoid Fever
- Salmonella typhi
- Gram - fac. anaerobe rod, enteric.
- Only in humans
- Mary Mallon
- Incubation 2 weeks
- Symptoms- high fever, headache, diarrhea.
70Typhoid Fever
- Mortality 1-2, was 10.
- 1-3 of recovered become carriers- colonizes gall
bladder. - Organisms divide in phagocytes and lymph nodes.
- Rx 3rd generation cephalosporin.
- Vaccine - killed organisms.
- 350 - 500 cases 70 foreign.
71Cholera
- Vibrio cholerae
- Gram - curved rod, polar flagella.
- In water sources.
- Grows in intestines, not invasive but produces
toxin. - Causes a copious, painless, watery diarrhea that
can quickly lead to severe dehydration -rice
water stool. - Usually no fever.
72Cholera
- Cholera toxin disrupts cAMP intestines loose
water and electrolytes. - Loss of 15 - 20 L per day.
- Usually self -limiting with treatment.
- Treatment- rehydration with sugar water,
electrolytes. - Rx tetracycline.
73Cholera
- Vaccine available, subunit B of toxin killed
organisms - Most cases along Gulf, associated with
shell-fish.
74E. coli gastroenteritis
- E. coli - O157H7
- Gram - fac. anaerobe rod, enteric.
- Enterotoxic not invasive- cause travelers
diarrhea. - 65-75 nonenvasive types.
75E. coli gastroenteritis
- E. coli - O157H7
- Enterohemorrhagic is invasive, similar to
Shigella- toxin. - 73,000 cases occur annually
in the United States. - Most deaths young children.
76Peptic Ulcers
- Helicobacter pylori
- Spiral shaped micro-aerophilic rod. Gram -
- Urease
- Survives in stomach urea ammonia neutralizes
stomach acid. - Immune system causes inflammation.
77Diseases of the Urinary and Reproductive System
- Leptospirosis (p. 723 )
- Gonorrhoea (p. 725 )
- NG Urethritis (p. 727 )
- Syphilis (p. 728 )
- Chancroid (p. 731 )
- Vaginosis (p. 732 )
78Leptospirosis
- Leptospira interogans
- Spirochete no Gram reaction, aerobe.
- Animal reservoirs.
- Animals shed in urine from infected kidneys.
- Many times spread expand in water- lakes, ponds.
- Enters through micro-breaks in intact skin.
79Leptospirosis
- Enters blood stream.
- 1-2 weeks later headache, muscle aches, chills,
fever appears abruptly. - Infects kidneys and liver.
- Death sometimes due to kidney failure.
- 50 cases / yr.
- Rx penicillin, tetracycline.
- No vaccine.
80STDs
STD Cases 2001
Chancroid 78
Chlamydia 783,242
Gonorrhoea 361,705
Herpes 1,000,000
HIV/ AIDS 41,755
Syphilis 6103
Trichomonas 5,000,000
81Gonorrhoea
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae
- Gram - diplococcus
- 150 AD Galen semen flow.
- 350,000 cases/yr.
- 1/5 reported.
- Gonococcus adheres to columnar epithelium via
fimbriae (pili).
82Gonorrhoea
- Gonococcus adheres to columnar epithelium
(urethra, cervix, throat) via fimbriae (pili)
does not adhere to squamous epithelium (vagina).
83Gonorrhoea
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae
- Gram - diplococcus
- Requires extra CO2 for growth, fastidious.
- Oxidase positive.
- Differentiate from N. meningitidis by maltose
fermentation.
84Gonorrhoea
- Causes inflamation leukocytes inflitrate.
- Purulent discharge.
- Female -infects cervix.
- 60-90 infection rate
- 60-80 asymptomatic
- Male - infects urethra.
- 80 infection rate
- No asymptomatic.
- Painful urination.
85Gonorrhoea
- Incubation 1-2 days.
- Untreated -male can block urethra, can spread to
testis- sterility. - Female - cervix, Not vagina.
- Lead to PID, joints, heart, meninges.
- Neonatal - eye infection, used AgNO3,
antibiotics. - Recovery- no immunity.
86Gonorrhoea
Gonococcal ophthalmia.
Can also produce throat infections.
- Rx penicillin, ceftriaxone.
- Combined with Chlamydia Rx.
- Resistance - PPNG, TRNG.
- Antibiotic pump.
87Nongonoccal Urethritis
- Chlamydia trachomatis
- OIP - needs ATP
- Most prevalent bacterial STD.
- 1 million cases /yr.
- 5X females than males.
- Infects uterine tubes leads to PID.
- Males- infects epididymus.
88Nongonoccal Urethritis
- Chlamydia trachomatis
- Cell culture or FAb test.
- Mycoplasma hominus
- Ureaplasma urelyticus
- Rx tetracycline, doxycycline, azithromycin
89Nongonoccal Urethritis
Cervix
Cervicitis with discharge
90Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
N. gonorrhoeae, C. trachomatis, M. hominus, U.
urelytica
91Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
- Salpingitis- inflammation of the ovaries.
- Lead to sterility and ectopic pregnancy.
- Rx doxycycline cefoxitin.
92Syphilis
- Treponema pallidum
- Spirochete, micro- aerophilic, obligate parasite.
Motile. Fastidious culture in epithelial cells. - Stealth pathogen. Transmitted direct contact
any part of body. - 6000 cases / yr.
93Syphilis
- Site of infection produces a single painless
ulcer, chancre. - Peripheral nerves affected.
- Incubation 1-3 weeks.
- Chancre disappears after 2-3 weeks.
- In female, may go unnoticed, if internal.
94Syphilis
95Syphilis
- 2-6 months later Secondary stages may appear.
- Rash appears on trunk and spreads, Includes palms
and soles (RMSF).
96Syphilis
- Secondary stages - infection is systemic.
- Organisms invade organs.
- Rash disappears after 2-3 weeks.
- Rash if ulcerates, is contagious.
97Syphilis
- 1-20 years later enters Tertiary Stage.
- Serious damage to internal organs.
- Heart, aorta, CNS,
- Gummas of soft tissue.
- Not infectious.
98Syphilis
- Rx penicillin, tetracycline.
- Congenital syphilis - transmitted to fetus.
- Can result in stillborn or deformaties, esp
hearing and sight.
99Syphilis
- Diagnosis serological.
- RPR, DFA-TP, TP-PA
100Chancroid
- Hemophilis ducreyi
- Gram - rod, requires hemin.
- ID50 - 1-2 organisms.
- Primary site can include multiple ulcers that
resemble the syphilis chancre.
101Chancroid
- Hemophilis ducreyi
- Multiple ulcers filled with organisms.
- But they are very painful.
102Chancroid
- Growth on blood agar with added nutrients, and
vancomycin. - Pathogenic mechanisms not fully understood do
resist phagocytosis. - Rx azithromycin, ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin.
- Strains becoming resistant to some antibiotics
(ampicillin, tetracycline, streptomycin).
103Bacterial Vaginosis
- Candida albicans, Trichomonas vaginalis,
Gardnerella vaginalis. - Occurs when normal flora (Lactobacillus)
disrupted. - Normal pH 4.0-4.5
- Above pH 4.5 abnormal.
- Lactobacillus produce H2O2, keeps other flora
supressed.
104Bacterial Vaginosis
- When Lactobacillus reduced others take over and
cause vaginosis. - Produces milky white fluid teeming with
organisms foul odor.
105Bacterial Vaginosis
NORMAL
Vaginosis
106Bacterial Vaginosis
- Treatment
- Re-establish Lactobacillus
- Acid production will restore flora.
- Sometimes reintroduce Lactobacillus.
- Serious, Rx metraniazole.
Which parasite??