About Gonorrhea Disease & Sexually
Transmitted Infection

ABOUT GONORRHEA

Gonorrhea is a curable sexually transmitted infection (STI). Sexually Transmitted DiseasesIt is the second most commonly reported bacterial sex related disease in the USA following chlamydia. During a recent year, 330,000 plus cases of gonorrhea were reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). When examining race and ethnicity, age, and gender, the highest rates of gonorrhea were found in African Americans, 15 to 24 years of age, and women, respectively.

Gonorrhea can spread into the uterus and fallopian tubes, resulting in a serious medical condition known as pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). PID affects more than 1 million women in this country every year and can cause tubal (ectopic) pregnancy and infertility in as many as 10 percent of infected women. In addition to gonorrhea playing a major role in pelvic inflammatory disease, some health researchers think it adds to the risk of getting HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) 'Aids' Infection.

CAUSE OF GONORRHEA

Gonorrhea is caused by bacteria called Neisseria gonorrhoeae. These bacteria can infect the genital tract, mouth, and rectum of both men and women. In women, however, the opening to the uterus (cervix) is the first place of body infection.

SYMPTOMS OF GONORRHEA

The bacteria are carried in semen and vaginal fluids and cause a discharge in men and women. A small number of people may be infected for several months without showing symptoms.

For women, the early symptoms of gonorrhea often are mild. Symptoms usually appear within 2 to 10 days after sexual contact with an infected partner. When women have symptoms, the first ones may include:

More advanced symptoms, which may indicate development of PID, include cramps and pain, bleeding between menstrual periods, vomiting, or fever.

Men have symptoms more often than women, including

If left untreated, men could experience prostate complications and epididymitis (inflammation of the testicles).

Symptoms of rectal infection include discharge, anal itching, and occasional painful bowel movements with fresh blood in the feces. Symptoms typically appear 2 to 5 days after infection but could appear as long as 30-days.

DIAGNOSIS FOR GONORRHEA

Health care providers usually use three laboratory techniques to diagnose gonorrhea.

Many providers prefer to use more than one test to increase the chance of an accurate medical diagnosis.

You usually can get the staining test results while in the office or clinic. This test is quite accurate for men but not so in women. Only one in two women with gonorrhea has a positive stain.

More often, health care providers use urine or cervical swabs for a new test that detects the genes of the bacteria. These tests are more accurate than culturing the bacteria.

The laboratory culture test involves placing a sample of the bodies discharge onto a culture plate. The health care provider also can take a culture to detect gonorrhea in the throat. Culture also allows testing for drug-resistant bacteria.

TREATMENT FOR GONORRHEA

Health care providers usually prescribe a single dose of one of the following antibiotics to treat gonorrhea.

If you are pregnant, or are younger than 18-yrs old, you should not be treated with certain types of antibiotics. Your doctor or health care provider can prescribe the best and safest antibiotic for you. Gonorrhea and chlamydia often infect people at the same time. Therefore, health care providers usually prescribe a combination of antibiotics, such as ceftriaxone and doxycycline or azithromycin, which will treat both diseases.

If you have gonorrhea, all of your sexual partners should get tested and then treated if infected, whether or not they have symptoms. Health experts also recommend that you not have sex until your infected partners have also been treated.

For updated information on treatment for gonorrhea, read the CDC-STD Treatment Guidelines.

PREVENTION of GONORRHEA

The surest way to avoid transmission of STI's is to abstain from sexual contact or be in a long-term mutually monogamous relationship with a partner who has been tested and is not infected.

By using latex condoms correctly and consistently during vaginal or rectal sexual activity, you can reduce your risk of getting gonorrhea and developing complications.

COMPLICATIONS of GONORRHEA

In untreated gonorrhea infections, the bacteria can spread up into the reproductive tract, or more rarely, can spread into the blood stream and infect the joints, heart valves, or the brain.

The most common result of untreated gonorrhea is PID. Gonococcal PID often appears immediately after the menstrual period. PID causes scar tissue to form in the fallopian tubes. If the tube is partially scarred, the fertilized egg may not be able to pass into the uterus. If this happens, the embryo may implant in the tube causing a tubal (ectopic) pregnancy. This serious complication may result in a miscarriage and can cause death of the mother.

In men, gonorrhea causes epididymitis, a painful condition of the testicles that can lead to infertility if left untreated. Also, gonorrhea affects the prostate gland and may cause scarring in the urine canal.

Rarely, untreated gonorrhea can spread through the blood to the joints. This can cause an inflammation of the joints, which is very serious.

If you are infected with gonorrhea, your risk of getting HIV infection increases (HIV, human immunodeficiency virus, causes AIDS). Therefore, it is extremely important for you to either prevent yourself from getting gonorrhea or get treated early if you already are infected with it.

Complications in newborns and children

If you are pregnant and have gonorrhea, you may give the infection to your baby as it passes through the birth canal during delivery. A health care provider can prevent infection of your baby's eyes by applying silver nitrate or other medicine to the eyes immediately after birth. Because of the risks from gonococcal infection to both you and your baby, health experts recommend that pregnant women have at least one test for gonorrhea during prenatal care.

When gonorrhea occurs in the genital tract, mouth, or rectum of a child, it is due most commonly to sexual abuse.

RESEARCH FOR GONORRHEA

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) continues to support a comprehensive, multidisciplinary program of research on N. gonorrhoeae (gonococci). Researchers are trying to understand how gonococci infect cells while evading defenses of the human immune system. Studies are ongoing to find
  1. How this bacterium attaches to host cells
  2. How it gets inside cells
  3. Gonococcal surface structures and how they can change
  4. Human response to infection by gonococci

Together, these efforts have led to, and will lead to, further improvements in sexually transmitted disease diagnosis and treatment of gonorrhea. They also may lead to development of an effective vaccine against gonorrhea to get reproductive health benefits.

Another important area of gonorrhea research concerns antibiotic resistance. This is particularly important because strains of N. gonorrhoeae that are resistant to recommended antibiotic treatments have spread from Southeast Asia to Hawaii and are now starting to appear on the US west coast. These events add urgency to conduct research on and develop new antibiotics and to prevent antibiotic resistance from spreading. Click-here for Health Tip-of-the-Day.

NIAID also supports research efforts to develop effective microbicides (antimicrobial preparations that can be applied inside the vagina) to prevent gonococcal infections.

Recently, scientists have determined the genetic code, or sequence, of the N. gonorrhoeae genome. They are using this medical research information to help us better understand how the bacterium causes human disease and becomes resistant to antibiotics.


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