
Harrison's PodClass: Internal Medicine Cases and Board Prep
Produced by McGraw Hill, Harrison's Podclass delivers illuminating and engaging discussions led by Drs. Cathy Handy Marshall and Charlie Wiener of The John Hopkins School of Medicine on key topics in medicine, featuring board-style case vignettes from Harrison's Review Questions and chapters from the acclaimed Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine – available on AccessMedicine from McGraw Hill.
Harrison's PodClass: Internal Medicine Cases and Board Prep
Ep 125: A 19-Year-Old Man with Dysuria
This case presents a 19-year-old man with new onset dysuria and purulent urethritis. The discussion focuses on likely diagnoses and appropriate therapy.
[upbeat intro music]
[Dr. Handy] Hi, everyone. Welcome
back to Harrison's Podclass.
We're your co-hosts. I'm Dr. Cathy Handy.
[Dr. Wiener] And I'm Dr. Charlie
Wiener, and we're joining
you from the Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine.
[music continues]
[Dr. Handy] Welcome to episode 125:
a 19-year-old man with dysuria.
[Dr. Wiener] Cathy, today's
patient is a 19-year-old
male college student
who comes to the clinic
reporting three to four
days of painful urination.
He thought he was dehydrated,
but despite vigorous fluid intake,
his symptoms have not abated.
He's sexually active
with a number of women
and rarely uses barrier contraceptives.
He denies any fever, chills,
arthritis, or skin rash.
There's no significant
past medical history,
and he takes no medications.
On examination, his only notable
finding is that you're able
to express purulent
material from his urethra.
[Dr. Handy] Okay, so we have a young man
with symptomatic urethritis.
What's the question?
[Dr. Wiener] Well, it's
a two-part question.
The first part is, all of the following
are likely causes of his symptoms except?
Option A. is Chlamydia trachomatis;
option B. is Gardnerella vaginalis;
option C. is herpes simplex virus;
option D. is Neisseria gonorrhoeae;
and option E. is Trichomonas vaginalis.
[Dr. Handy] All right, common
causes of urethral discomfort
and discharge in men include
Chlamydia trachomatis,
Neisseria gonorrhoeae,
Mycoplasma genitalium,
which it didn't mention,
ureaplasma, urealyticum,
Trichomonas vaginalis,
HSV, and then rarely, adenovirus.
Until recently, Chlamydia
trachomatis caused 30 to 40%
approximately of cases of
non-gonococcal urethritis,
particularly, in heterosexual men.
However, the proportion of
cases due to this organism
has probably declined in some populations
served by effective
chlamydial control programs
and older men with
urethritis appear less likely
to have chlamydial infection.
HSV and T. vaginalis each
cause a small proportion
of non-gonococcal urethritis
cases in the United States.
Recently, multiple studies
have consistently implicated
M. genitalium as a probable cause
of many chlamydia-negative cases.
We used to talk more about ureaplasmas,
but fewer studies than in the past
have implicated them as a pathogen.
[Dr. Wiener] So the only
organism that we mentioned
that is not a common cause
of male urethritis is Gardnerella, right?
[Dr. Handy] Yeah, so answer
B. Gardnerella vaginalis,
is a usual cause of
bacterial vaginosis in women.
It's not a pathogen in men.
[Dr. Wiener] Okay, well let's
talk more about our patient.
You mentioned distinguishing between
gonococcal and non-gonococcal urethritis.
How do we make that distinction?
[Dr. Handy] First thing you can do
is a Gram stain of the discharge.
When there's urethritis, you should see
at least two neutrophils
per high-power field.
In gonococcal infection,
you'll see Gram-negative
intracellular diplococci.
If you can't express a discharge,
you can obtain an
anterior urethral specimen
by passing a small urethral genital swab
two to three centimeters into the urethra.
Patients with symptoms who
lack objective evidence
of urethritis generally do not benefit
from repeated courses of antibiotics,
and in those cases, other
etiologies of symptoms,
such as trauma or reactive
urethritis, or prostate disease
should be considered.
[Dr. Wiener] Okay, we're
going to get to treatment
in a minute, but any additional
workup on our patient?
[Dr. Handy] Yes, while the
Gram stain is 98% sensitive
for gonococcal infection,
many clinics are not set up
to effectively do the test.
It is best to simultaneously
assess for infection
with gonorrhea and C. trachomatis
by nucleic acid amplification
testing or N-A-A-T or NAAT,
of first-catch urine.
The urine specimen tested should consist
of the first 10 to 15
milliliters of the stream,
and if possible, patients should not
have voided for the prior two hours.
This is highly sensitive and
specific for the diagnosis
of gonococcal or chlamydial
urethritis in men.
[Dr. Wiener] Okay, back to our patient.
This patient's Gram stain does show
greater than five polies
per high-power field
and no intracellular diplococci.
[Dr. Handy] Okay, so our patient
has non-gonococcal urethritis.
[Dr. Wiener] Exactly, and the
question asks, which of the
following is the appropriate
treatment for him at this time?
And the options are, A. ceftriaxone;
B. doxycycline;
C. fluconazole;
D. metronidazole;
or E. nitrofurantoin.
[Dr. Handy] The treatment
of choice for non-gonococcal
urethritis is doxycycline,
so the answer is B.
And this will effectively
treat the organisms,
including chlamydia but not gonococcus,
that we mentioned earlier.
Azithromycin is also an option,
but recent studies have
demonstrated doxycycline is superior
likely due to resistance of
organisms such as mycoplasma.
If you're not sure that you
have fully ruled out gonococcus,
then ceftriaxone can also be considered.
[Dr. Wiener] Just for completeness,
what about the other antibiotics?
[Dr. Handy] Fluconazole is
used for fungal infections,
notably Candida.
Metronidazole is effective
treatment for Trichomonas,
and nitrofurantoin is often
used in urinary tract infection
but has no activity against the
common causes of urethritis.
[Dr. Wiener] He should also
contact his recent partners, right?
[Dr. Handy] Yes, they should
be tested, particularly for
chlamydial infection, which
may be subclinical in women,
but can cause complications
if it's not diagnosed and treated.
[Dr. Wiener] Okay, so the
teaching point in this case
is that urethritis in
men can be distinguished
between gonococcal and
non-gonococcal urethritis.
There are a number of organisms
that can cause non-gonococcal
urethritis, and the treatment
for non-gonococcal
urethritis is doxycycline.
[Dr. Handy] You can
check out this question
and other questions like it
in Harrison's Review Questions
and learn more about this
topic in the Harrison's chapter
on urinary tract infections.
Visit the show notes for
links to helpful resources,
including related chapters
and review questions from Harrison's.
And thank you so much for listening.
If you enjoyed this episode,
please leave us a review
so we can reach more
listeners just like you.
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