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DEVELOPMENTAL CYCLE OF CHLAMYDIA

CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Chlamydiae are small gram-negative obligate intracellular microorganisms that preferentially infect squamocolumnar epithelial cell (www. Google. Com.2010).
        Chlamydia is the most prevalent sexually transmitted disease resulting in urethritis, with frequencies exceeding those of Neisseria gonorrhoeae  
        In the United State for instance, roughly four million cases are reported annually mostly occurring in men and women under the age of 25 (Barners, 1990).
        In Nigeria and indeed most developed nation, majority of the reported cases urethritis are diagnosed as being caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae, StaphyLococcus aureus and streptococcus Spp.
        This could be attributed to inadequate facilities to establish proper test for the diagnosis of chamydia infection. As a result, cases of urethritis are wrongly diagnosed and treated. This calls for proper research work to establish the major aetiologic agent of urethritis. This will go a long to aid prompt treatment of reoccurring urethritis resulting from wrong diagnosis and treatment.
        According to the centers of disease control and prevention (CDC), chlamydia is the most common bacteria infection in the United State. About 1.1 million new cases were reported in 2007.
        However, because as many as 75% of infected women and 50% Infected men do not experience symptoms of infection, the CDC estimates that up to 2.8 million new cases may occur each year in the United States. Chlamydia is most prevalent among teenagers. Nearly 75% of all new cases occur in women under the age of 25. By age 30, 50% of sexually active women have been exposed to Chlamydia.
        Non-gonococcal urethritis is the most commonly diagnosed sexually transmitted disease in men in the United States.




OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
i.            To determine the prevalence of Chlamydia infection.
ii.          To ascertain the age distribution of the infection.
iii.         To determine the sex distribution of the infection.
iv.         To make recommendations on how to control or eradicate the infection.














CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
Chlamydiae are obligated intra-cellular prokaryotic parasites of eukaryotic cells. This implies that these organisms can survive only by establishing within the epithetical cell of the human or animal cells. The reason for this intracellular parasitism is the fact that chlamydiae are energy parasites i.e. they require an energy source for replication and survival.
        All human cells have specific system that they use to form ATP (adenosine triphosphate) which is the major source of energy. Chlamydiae have a cell membrane transport system that ‘steal’ ATP from the host cells.
Chlamydiae are considered as bacteria for the following reasons: 
a.         Like bacteria, they posses both RNA and DNA.
b.        They multiply by binary fission.
c.         They have rigid cell wall resembling the bacteria cell wall but lacks muramic acid and is not susceptible to lysozyme action.
d.        They posses ribosomes.
e.         They have a variety of metabolically active enzymes example they can liberatec Co2 from glucose. Some can be synthesized folates .
f.          Their growth can be inhibited by many anti-microbial drugs, especially tetracycline and erythromycin.
As a result of their unique development cycle these micro-organisms have been classified into a separate order, chlamydiales, with one family containing one genius, Chlamydia. There are three species, C. psittaci, C. Pneumoniae and C. trachomatis. The focus of this review is on. trachomatis the aetiologic agent of urethitis, cervicits, prostatitis, trachoma, inclusion conjunctivitis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Others includes; Lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV), Reiter’s disease and infant pneumonia, salpingitis.
This species is divided into several serological varieties (serovars) ranging A-K.
The serovars implicated in both men and women for urethritis are serovars D-K which are associated with genital tract infections. (peeling,   et al., 1996)

DEVELOPMENTAL CYCLE OF CHLAMYDIA
Chlamydiae have a unique biphasic life cycle that is adaptable to both intracellular and extracellular environments.
a.           Elementary Body (EB): this is the small infections metabolically adapted for surviving outside the cell. The EB prevents phagosome-lysozyme fusion and then undergoes reorganization to form a reticulate body (RB).
b.          Reticulate body (RB): The larger intracellular from, non-infectious metabolically active, replicate form that is unstable out of the cell. 
The elementary body is adapted for extracellular survival and infection but does not replicate. It is relatively resistant to the usual method of disinfections (sonication) and trypsin treatment and is relatively impermeable. The organism have special preference for columnar epithelia cells.
After attachment, the elementary bodies are endocytosed (engulfed) by the host cell and once inside the cell, the EB loses its infectivity and undergoes a number of changes associated with its transition to reticulate body. Continued development occurs with the formation of a cytoplasmic 

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