Proctitis, Proctocolitis, and Enteritis
6 questions
Learning Objectives
- List common infectious causes of proctitis, proctocolitis, and enteritis
- Summarize initial evaluation of persons with suspected proctitis, proctocolitis, or enteritis
- State recommended treatment of proctitis
- Discuss appropriate follow-up after treatment of infectious proctitis
Authors
David H. Spach, MD
David H. Spach, MD
Professor of Medicine
Editor-in-Chief, National STD Curriculum
Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
University of Washington
Professor of Medicine
Editor-in-Chief, National STD Curriculum
Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
University of Washington
Disclosures: None
Joseph N. Cherabie, MD, MSc
Joseph N. Cherabie, MD, MSc
Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases
Washington University in St. Louis
Medical Director, St. Louis STI/HIV Prevention Training Center
Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases
Washington University in St. Louis
Medical Director, St. Louis STI/HIV Prevention Training Center
Reviewers
Christine M. Johnston, MD, MPH
Christine M. Johnston, MD, MPH
Associate Professor of Medicine
Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
University of Washington School of Medicine
Medical Director
University of Washington STD Prevention Training Center
Disclosures: Grant to institution: GSK, Moderna
Consulting Fee: Assembly Biosciences, GSK, and Pfizer
Consulting Fee: Assembly Biosciences, GSK, and Pfizer
2nd Edition
This is a substantial revision of the original Question Bank Topic. The previous edition was titled Proctitis, Proctocolitis, and Enteritis and available until October 5th, 2021.
CNE/CME Continuing Education
This question bank topic qualifies for:
View CE Notices | View CME+MOC Notice
- 0.5 CME AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™, 0.5 MOC Part II Points, or
- 0.5 CNE contact hours (does NOT qualify for pharmacology CE for advanced practice nurses)
CNE and CME Origination: February 1st, 2017
CNE and CME Reviewed: July 16th, 2019
CNE and CME Reviewed: December 29th, 2020
CNE and CME Reviewed: April 29th, 2022
CNE and CME Expiration: April 28th, 2025 (2nd Edition)
View CE Notices | View CME+MOC Notice
Steps to Acquire CE for this Question Bank Topic:
1
Answer
Answer all questions
2
Score 80%+
Answer correctly
3
Claim CE
Choose CNE or CME+MOC
4
Give Feedback
Complete survey
5