General characteristics
Elementary body
Metabolically inactive, infectious, adapted for extracellular survival
Reticulate body
Metabolically active, not infectious, adapted for intracellular growth
C. abortus
Abortion in small ruminants, mainly sheep
- enzootic abortion of ewes and goats
C. felis
Chronic conjunctivitis (chlamydial conjunctivitis), rhinitis, bronchopneumonia - in stray and domestic cats
C. pneumoniae
Respiratory pathogen in people
C. psittaci
Avian chlamydiosis (psittacosis) - in birds or poultry fowl
C. suis
Involved in multiple infection sites of the body
- swine
C. pecorum
Sporadic bovine encephalomyelitis
- neurologic signs and polyserositis
C. trachomatis
Diseases in people
- trachoma, urogenital infection, lymphogranuloma venereum
Why is the respiratory system involved?
Aerosol transmission is one of the main infected routes
Avian chlamydiosis
Accompanied by conjunctivitis, serositis, fibrinopericarditis, hepatomegaly, anemia
Dogs infected with ________
C. psittaci
- bronchopneumonia, fever, dry cough, keratoconjunctivitis
Cats infected with _______
C. felis
- rhinitis, conjunctivitis, bronchopneumonia
What are the 3 main difficulties in treatment?
What are the drugs of choice?
Tretracyclines or fluoroquinolones
Prophylactic immunization
Elicits sterilizing immunity and virtually 100% protection from disease
- does not apply to chlamydiae!!
C. abortus live vaccines
Prevents abortion in small ruminants
- might be involved in enzootic abortion
C. psittaci infection
Lethal intracellular bacteria!
- causes avian chlamydiosis, human psittacosis, seminal vesiculitis, pneumonia in neonates, conjunctivitis, synovial tissue arthritis
Diagnosis of avian chlamydiosis
Requires isolation and identification of C. psittaci in chick embryo or cell cultures (BGM, L929, Vero)
Avian chlamydiosis treatment
Is a reportable disease!
Feline chlamydiosis
C. felis
C. abortus in ruminants
Recognized as one of the most important causes of abortion in sheep
C. abortus control
Isolating all affected ewes and lambs, treating in contact ewes with long-acting oxytetracycline or oral tetracycline