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Chlamydia

Chlamydia is currently one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases — about 4 million cases of chlamydia occur in the USA each year. However, about half of all men and three-quarters of all women who have chlamydia have no symptoms and don't know that they have the disease. The disease is transmitted by the Chlamydia trachomatis bacterium. It can be serious but it is easily cured if detected in time. It is also, and possibly more importantly, the biggest preventable cause of blindness in the world. Blindness occurs as a complication of trachoma (chlamydia conjunctivitis). more...

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Features

Almost half of all women who get chlamydia and aren't treated by a doctor will get pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), a generic term for infection of the uterus, fallopian tubes, and/or ovaries. PID can cause scarring inside the reproductive organs, which can later cause serious complications, including chronic pelvic pain, difficulty becoming pregnant, ectopic (tubal) pregnancy, and other dangerous complications of pregnancy. Chlamydia causes 250,000 to 500,000 cases of PID every year in the U.S.

In women, chlamydia may not cause any symptoms, but symptoms that may occur include: unusual vaginal bleeding or discharge, pain in the abdomen, painful sexual intercourse, fever, painful urination or the urge to urinate more frequently than usual.

In men, chlamydia may not cause any symptoms, but symptoms that may occur include: a painful or burning sensation when urinating, an unusual discharge from the penis, swollen or tender testicles, or fever.

Chlamydia in men can spread to the testicles, causing epididymitis, which can cause sterility. Chlamydia causes more than 250,000 cases of epididymitis in the USA each year.

Chlamydia may also cause Reiter's Syndrome, especially in young men. About 15,000 men get Reiter's Syndrome from chlamydia each year in the USA, and about 5,000 are permanently affected by it.

As many as half of all infants born to mothers with chlamydia will be born with the disease. Chlamydia can affect infants by causing spontaneous abortion (miscarriage), premature birth, blindness, and pneumonia.

Treatment

Fortunately, chlamydia can be effectively cured with antibiotics once it is detected. Current Centers for Disease Control guidelines provide for the following treatments:

  • Azithromycin 1 gram by mouth once, or
  • Doxycycline 100 milligrams twice daily for seven days.

Prevention

Because chlamydia is so common and because it often doesn't produce symptoms, it is especially important to take precautions against sexually transmitted disease by practicing safer sex.

Pathophysiology

Chlamydiae replicate intracellularly, within a membrane-bound structure termed an inclusion. It is inside this inclusion, which somehow avoids lysosomal fusion and subsequent degradation, that the metabolically inactive "elementary body" (EB) form of Chlamydia becomes the replicative "reticulate body" (RB). The multiplying RBs then become EBs again and burst out of the host cell to continue the infection cycle. Since Chlamydiae are obligate intracellular parasites, they cannot be cultured outside of host cells, leading to many difficulties in research.

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Chlamydia pneumoniae infection and possible relationship to adult onset asthma
From CHEST, 10/1/05 by Amira F. Amer

PURPOSE: The work entailed 40 patients with adult onset asthma divided into two matched groups, 20 patients with acute asthma exacerbation, and 20 patients with chronic stable asthma.

METHODS: Serum samples from from all studied patients were tested for the presence of C. pneumoniae specific antibodies (IgG, IgM) using enzyme linked immuonosorbent assay. Seropositive samples for IgG-were further examined with microimmunofluorescence (MIF) test for titration of IgG antibodies against c. pneumoniae. An IgG titer of [greater than or equal to] 512 was inerperted as evidence of acute primary infection or re- infection, and IgG titer of 64-256 for chronic infection. Nasopharyngeal swab specimens for detection of c. pneumoniae by polymerase chain reaction assay, sputum culture and pulmonary function tests were also performed.

RESULTS: Seropositivity to c. pneumoniae specific IgG was found in 85% and in 80% of patients with acute exacerbation and chronic asthma respectively. In seropositive cases, MIF test illustrated IgG titers consistent with acute infection in 8/17 (47.1%) of cases with acute exacerbation versus 3/16 (18.8%)with chronic asthma. IgG titers indicating chronic infection were detected in 9/17 (52.9%) cases with acute exacerbation compared to 13/16 (81.3%) with chronic stable asthma. The mean log titer of IgG was significanly higher in acute asthma than in chronic asthma. IgM could not be detected in any of the studied patients suggesting that acute infection was due to re-infection. PCR detected c. pneumoniae infection in 5 cases with acute exacerbation and had serological evidence of acute infection. All patients with acute infection showed severe airway obstruction. Significant inverse relationship was found between IgGtiterand indices of airway obstuction in both studied groups. Stepwise regression analysis revealed that IgG titer was mainly related to FEF 25-75%.

CONCLUSION: Re-infection and chronic infection with c. pneumoniae are common in adult onset asthma. C. pneumoniae could be a triggering factor for asthma exacerbation. The high IgG titeres of IgG antibody to C. pneumoniae and its strong relationship with the pulmonary physiological impairment in patients with acute and chronic asthma provide evidence that c. pneumoniae can play role in the immunopathogenesis and severity of asthma presentation.

CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Effort aiming at evaluating and eradicating infection with c. pneumoniae are recommended for proper asthma control.

DISCLOSURE: Iman Hatata, None.

Amira F. Amer MD Malaka M. El Mofty MD Iman A. Hatata MD * Alexandria University Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria, Egypt

COPYRIGHT 2005 American College of Chest Physicians
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group

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