Difference between revisions of "Category:Chlamydophila species"
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*May cause [[Joints Inflammatory - Pathology#In Sheep|arthritis in sheep]] and [[Joints Inflammatory - Pathology#In Cattle|arthritis in cattle]] | *May cause [[Joints Inflammatory - Pathology#In Sheep|arthritis in sheep]] and [[Joints Inflammatory - Pathology#In Cattle|arthritis in cattle]] | ||
[[Category:Bacteria]] | [[Category:Bacteria]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Gram_negative_bacteria]] |
Revision as of 10:21, 12 May 2010
Overview
- Host adapted and non-host adapted species varying in virulence for different hosts
- Species cause specific diseases in particular hosts
- Respiratory, enteric, pleural and reproductive diseases in animals and humans
- Conjunctivitis, arthritis, abortion, urethritis, enteritis, pneumonia, encephalomyelitis
- Manifestation varies from subclinical to severe systemic infections
- Intestinal infections often subclinical and persistent
- Human infections usualy acquired from infected birds, causing psittacosis or ornithosis, causing respiratory infections
Characteristics
- Obligate intracellular bacteria
- Gram negative bacteria with outer membrane, LPS, ribosomes, DNA and RNA
- Peptidoglycan cell wall resistant to lysozyme
- Only grow in presence of living eukaryotic cells
- Unable to synthesis ATP therefore require intermediates from host cells
- Not stained by Gram stain
- Two morphological forms
- Elementary body, the infective extracellular form, which is small, metabolically inert and osmotically stable; surrounded by cytoplasmic membrane, outer membrane with LPS, but no peptidoglycan
- Retiuculate body: larger, metabolically active, osmotically fragile
- Elementary body survives in the environment for several days
Pathogenesis and pathogenicity
- Elementary body enters host epithelial cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis
- Transformation into larger reticulate body within endosome; known as an inclusion
- Reticulate body divides by binary fission to form many new chlamydia cells
- Reticulate bodies mature and condense to form elementary bodies
- Elementary bodies released from dying host cells after about 72 hours to infect other cells
- Persistent infections can occur if replication delayed by environmental conditions such as presence of interferon gamma
- Many infections subclinical due to intracellular existence of chlamydia preventing inflammatory reactions
- Chronic infections may fail to induce an immune response, or may repeatedly stimulate the immune system, causing a delayed hypersensitivity reaction and tissue damage
- Prolonged faecal shedding of organisms
- Clinical infections occur in non-natural host species
- CLinical signs depend on route of infection and degree of exposure
Chlamydophila psittaci
Chlamydophila abortus
Chlamydophila felis
Chlamydophila pecorum
- Common inapparent intestinal infection of cattle
- Conjunctivitis and arthritis
- Sporadic bovine encephalomyelitis:
- Usually in cattle under 3 years
- Fever, incoordination, depression, excessive salivation, diarrhoea
- Recumbency and opisthotonos before death
- Up to 50% mortality
- Vacular damage in brain
- Serofibrinious peritonitis
- Treat with high doses tetracyclines and tylosin
Diagnosis
- Direct microscopy of smears and tissues e.g. organs from aborted foetuses, liver/spleen from avian cases
- Kosters (modified Ziehl-Neelsen) stain of placental smears shows small red rods
- Blue inclusions in cytoplasm of Giemsa-stained cells
- Methylene blue stain with darkfield microscopy
- Fluorescent antibody stain
- Antigen detection kits for diagnosis from swabs
- ELISA to detect Chlamydophila LPS
- Isolation in embryonated eggs and McCoy cells as well as animal tissues
- PCR to detect chlamydial DNA
- Serological tests: complement fixation, ELISA, indirect immunofluorescence
- May cause arthritis in sheep and arthritis in cattle
Pages in category "Chlamydophila species"
The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.