Background: The microscopical diagnosis of male urethritis was recently questioned by Rietmeijer and Mettenbrink, lowering the diagnostic criteria of the diagnosis to ≥2 polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNL) per high power field (HPF), and adopted by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in their 2015 STD Treatment Guidelines. The European Non-Gonococcal Urethritis Guideline advocates a limit of ≥5 PMNL/HPF.
Objective: To determine if syndromic treatment of urethritis should be considered with a cutoff value of ≥2 PMNL/HPF in urethral smear.
Methods: The design was a cross-sectional study investigating the presence and degree of urethritis relative to specific infections in men attending an STI clinic as drop-in patients.
Results: The material included 2 cohorts: a retrospective study of 13,295 men and a prospective controlled study including 356 men. We observed a mean chlamydia prevalence of 2.3% in the 0-9 stratum, and a 12-fold higher prevalence (27.3%) in the strata above 9. Of the chlamydia cases, 89.8% were diagnosed in strata above 9. For Mycoplasma genitalium, the prevalence was 1.4% in the 0-9 stratum and 11.2% in the stratum ≥10, and 83.6% were diagnosed in strata above 9. For gonorrhea, a significant increase in the prevalence occurred between the 0-30 strata and >30 strata from 0.2% to 20.7%. The results of the prospective study were similar.
Conclusions: Our data do not support lowering the cutoff to ≥2 PMNL/HPF. However, a standardization of urethral smear microscopy seems to be impossible. The cutoff value should discriminate between low and high prevalence of chlamydia, mycoplasma, and gonorrhea to include as many as possible with a specific infection in syndromic treatment, without overtreating those with few PMNL/HPF and high possibility of having nonspecific or no urethritis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/OLQ.0000000000000565 | DOI Listing |
Open Vet J
April 2024
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Diagnosis, College of Veterinary Medicine, Qassim University, Buraidah, Saudi Arabia.
Background: Bloody urine is classified in farm animals as hematuria, hemoglobinuria, and myoglobinuria. In small ruminants, discolored urine is reported due to several etiologies which is sometimes fatal. Of these causes are babesiosis, bacillary hemoglobinuria, copper toxicity, and hypophosphatemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Assoc Med Bras (1992)
April 2024
University of Health Science, Tepecik Education and Research Hospital, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology - İzmir, Turkey.
Sex Transm Infect
February 2024
Unity Sexual Health, University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust, Bristol, UK.
Objectives: Chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) in men is a condition associated with significant morbidity which is typically managed in sexual health services. We introduced a modified biopsychosocial approach for managing CPPS in men, reducing use of antibiotics and evaluated its application in a retrospective case review.
Methods: Patients attended for a full consultation covering symptomology, onset and social history.
Sex Transm Dis
November 2023
From the Hospital Universitario Donostia, San Sebastián, Gipuzkoa, Spain.
Background: Human adenovirus (HAdV) is likely an underdiagnosed cause of urethritis, although it was already associated with urethritis in descriptions published more than 40 years ago. Differential clinical features of this entity, such as meatitis, conjunctivitis, and a predominance of mononuclear white blood cells in first-void urine and/or urethral smear, can be useful to increase diagnostic suspicion.
Methods: We retrospectively studied 91 episodes of HAdV-associated urethritis diagnosed for 9 years and 6 months after optimizing efforts to detect the pathogen mainly in patients with features suggestive of this condition.
Indian J Dermatol
January 2023
Department of Social Preventive Medicine, Hitech Hospital, Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India.
Background: Male urethritis is primarily sexually transmitted in India and has also shown a high rate. Urethritis or inflammation of the urethra is a multifactorial condition. It is called gonococcal urethritis (GU) when is detected in a urethral smear of the patient and non-gonococcal urethritis (NGU) when this organism cannot be visualized.
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