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Lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV)
Lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV)
Statutory notification
Lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV) is a notifiable infectious disease in Western Australia.
See
notifiable communicable disease case definitions (Word 1.29MB)
.
Notifications should be made using the communicable disease notification form for
metropolitan residents (PDF 209KB)
or
regional residents (PDF 208KB)
.
For notification of regional residents see contact details of
public health units
.
See also description of
statutory medical notifications in Western Australia
.
Public health management
Important information
Infectious agent
: Rare subtypes of
Chlamydia trachomatis
bacteria (L1 – L3).
Transmission
: LGV is passed on by unprotected vaginal, oral or anal sex with an infected person. It can also be spread by sharing sex toys. An infected mother can pass LGV on to her baby during childbirth.
Incubation period
: From 3 to 30 days but may be longer.
Infectious period
: Infected persons are presumed to be infectious. Without treatment, infection can persist for years.
Case exclusion
: Do not exclude.
Contact exclusion
: Do not exclude.
Treatment
: Antibiotic treatment as recommended by the
Guidelines for Managing Sexually Transmitted Infections - WA
.
Immunisation
: None available.
Case follow-up
: Is the responsibility of health care providers.
Guidelines
Guidelines for Managing Sexually Transmitted Infections - WA
Other WA and National policies and guidelines
Notifiable disease data and reports
General infectious disease reports
Notifiable infectious disease dashboard
Produced by
Public Health