1 / 19

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم. GENUS: CHLAMYDIA Prof. Khalifa SifawGhenghesh. Small Gram-negative bacteria (Stain poorly with Gram’s stain) Like Bacteria Have both DNA and RNA, Ribosomes, a Cell wall, and Divide by Binary fission Like Viruses Obligate intracellular parasites Differ from Bacteria

Télécharger la présentation

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم GENUS: CHLAMYDIA Prof. Khalifa SifawGhenghesh

  2. Small Gram-negative bacteria (Stain poorly with Gram’s stain) • Like Bacteria • Have both DNA and RNA, Ribosomes, a Cell wall, and Divide by Binary fission • Like Viruses • Obligate intracellular parasites • Differ from Bacteria • Have no peptidoglycan in their cell wall • Can not produce their own ATP • Require to use host ATP (Energy parasite)

  3. Chlamydia species • C. trachomatis • 3 biovars • Those causing trachoma and inclusion conjunctivitis (TRIC) • Those causing lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV) • The one causing mouse pneumonitis (MoPn) • C. psittaci > Infect both mammals and birds • C. pneumoniae > both humans and animals • C. pecorum > Some infect mammals

  4. Trachoma biovars • 14 Serovars: A-K • Serovars A, Ba, B, C • Classic trachoma • Serovars D-K • Inclusion conjunctivitis and Genital infections • LGV biovars • 3 Serovars: L1, L2, L3

  5. Can be stained with Giemsa stain • Elementary body (EB) • Extracellular, infectious metabolically inert form of chlamydiae • Reticulate body (RB) • Intracellular, non-infectious, metabolically active particle

  6. Infection to Humans • Ocular infection • Trachoma > in countries where sanitation and hygiene standards are poor • Spread by eye seeking flies, or fingers, from one patient to another • Blindness • “Trachoma belt” > North Africa to South-East Asia • Adult inclusion conjunctivitis (paratrachoma) • Acute stage >> follicular conjunctivitis • Self-limited

  7. Chlamydial ophthalmia neonatrum (inclusion blennorrhoea) • 5-21 days after birth • If not treated > after 1 year > secondary bacterial infection > ocular damage and even blindness • Source: • infected genital tract of the mother

  8. Genital infection • C. trachomatis is the Commonest cause of non-gonococcal urethritis in males (30%) • LGV • In both males and females in tropics and subtropics

  9. In females • Mucopurulent cervicitis and urethritis • Vaginitis and vaginal discharge • Asymptomatic females if not treated • Ascending infection >> Pelvic inflammatory disease (endometritis or salpingitis or both) • Tubal damage >> ectopic pregnancy and infertility

  10. Infection in pregnancy • C. psittaci • Miscarriage or intra-uterine death • Patients had contact with sheep • C. trachomatis • Isolated from abortion products

  11. Respiratory infection • C. pneumoniae • 3rd or 4th cause of pneumonia • Pharyngitis, bronchitis, otitis and sinusitis • C. psittaci • Psittacosis in humans from avian strains • Disease ranges from an influenza-like illness, to severe illness with typhoidal state ad pneumonia.

  12. C. trachomatis • Pneumonitis in neonates (infection acquired from the mother)

  13. Laboratory Diagnosis • Cultivation • MacCoy cells treated with cycloheximide • Organism detected by staining for inclusions or EBs • Detects only living cells • Antigen detection • Using probes for DNA or mRNA that identify the infected cells • PCR • Amplification of parts of the genome

  14. Chlamydia trachomatis from a urethral scrape

  15. Serology • Micro-immunofluorescence test • Using Ags from all chlamydial strains to detect species-specific and serovar-specific Ab • Complement fixation test • Detecting Ab in serum directed against group Ag

  16. Chlamydia psittaciDirect FA stained mouse brain impression smear

  17. Treatment and Control • Chemotherapy • Tetracycline in adults and Erythromycin in babies • For 3 weeks • Azithromycin • Single dose • Contact tracing • Partners of index cases (even if clinically normal) • Neonatal infection • Both parents should be treated

  18. Animal contact • Avoidance of contact with sources of infection (specially pregnant women) • Sheep, milking and shearing • Control of importation of psittacine birds • Hygiene

More Related