Chlamydial Infections Flashcards
1
Q
Chlamydiae
A
- obligate intracellular parasites
- smaller than most other bacteria
- cannot generate ATP, must hijack host to reproduce
LIFE CYCLE with ELEMENTARY BODY - metabolically inactive form
RETICULATE BODY - metabolically active, divides repeatedly and destroys host cell
2
Q
C. trachomatis STI
A
- serovars D-K
- men - urethritis, epididymitis, proctitis
- women - cervicitis, endometritis, salpingitis, PID
- spread in genital secretions
- asymptomatic causes large reservoir for transmission
- causes conjunctivitis in newborns
- infiltrate of neutrophils and lymphocytes
3
Q
C. trachomatis - Lymphogranuloma venereum
A
- Serovars L1-L3
- begins as genital ulcer then spreads to lymph nodes
- enters through skin break
- necrotizing lymphadenitis develops 1-3 weeks after primary lesion
4
Q
C. trachomatis - Trachoma
A
- leading cause of blindness in many developing countries
- serovars A, B, Ba, C
- progressive scars of conjunctiva and cornea
- reproduction in conjunctival epithelium, inciting inflammatory infiltrate
5
Q
C. psittaci - Psittacosis/ornithosis
A
- self-limited pneumonia transferred to humans from birds
- humans inhale infectious particles from feathers
- infects pulmonary macrophages and travels to liver and spleen where it reproduces and is distributed by bloodstream
- interstitial pneumonia
- tx with tetracycline
6
Q
C. pneumoniae
A
- acute, self-limited mild RTI
- transmitted person to person
- only 10% infections cause clinical pneumonia