Eye & Ear Infections II (9) Flashcards

1
Q

What is chlamydial conjunctivitis?

A

an acute, chronic, or recurrent infection of the conjunctiva of a variety of animals with intracellular bacteria of the family Chlamydiaceae

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2
Q

Though chlamydia conjunctivitis is often asymptomatic, infection can also lead to _____

A

acute or chronic purulent inflammation of the conjunctiva +/- keratitis or other pathologies

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3
Q

T/F: Chlamydia conjunctivitis is only localized

A

FALSE - can arise as a result of a systemic infection (so, you treat with a systemic administration of antibiotic)

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4
Q

Where does chlamydiae infect?

A

the mucosa of a variety of anatomic sites
- GI tract, repro tract, conjunctiva

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5
Q

Chlamydia ______ is related to guinea pigs

A

caviae

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6
Q

Clamydia ____ is related to birds and sheep

A

psittaci

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7
Q

Chlamydia ____ is related to cattle, sheep, pigs, and other ruminants such as reindeer, wildlife (koalas), and crocodiles

A

pecorum

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8
Q

What is significant about chalmydia pecorum?

A

most common cause of pink eye in SHEEP

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9
Q

What is characteristic with chlamydia regarding their mechanism as a parasite?

A

“energy parasites”

unable to synthesize ATP

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10
Q

What is the infectious form of chlamydiae?

A

elementary bodies (EBs): extracellular

small
metabolically inactive
DO NOT multiply
infectious

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11
Q

What is the reproductive form of chlamydiae?

A

reticulate bodies (RBs): intracellular

large
metabolically active
multiply intracellularly
NON-infectious

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12
Q

What is the developmental cycle of chlamydiae? It starts at development of _______

A

starts with development of reticulate bodies

has to change from reticulate (intracellular) bodies to elementary bodies (extracellular)

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13
Q

What is the name for Feline Chlamydiosis?

A

Chlamydia felis

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14
Q

What is Chlamydia felis associated with?

A

conjunctivitis
less commonly, rhinitis

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15
Q

T/F: C. felis is rare to cause a lower respiratory tract infection

A

TRUE

the original name for chlamydia felis was feline pneumonitis which is a misnomer because it rarely causes these infections

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16
Q

How is C. felis transmitted?

A

direct or indirect contact with conjunctival or nasal secretions

organism may also shed from the reproductive tract

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17
Q

Where is feline chlamydiosis more common in (what environment)?

A

multi-cat households

18
Q

What are clinical signs of feline chlamydiosis?

A

unilateral or bilateral conjunctival congestion

clear ocular discharge

chemosis and blepharospasm are evident

19
Q

Secondary infection in Feline chalmydiosis also occurs with organisms like _____, and the ocular discharge may become ______

A

mycoplasma felis & staphylococcus spp.

mucopurulent (composed of mucus and pus)

20
Q

Conjunctivitis may also be accompanied by _____ and ________

A

sneezing

nasal discharge

21
Q

How do you diagnose Feline chalmydiosis?

A

conjunctival swab - specimen of choice

22
Q

When diagnosing Feline chlamydiosis, giemsa-stained conjunctival smears may reveal ______

A

intracytoplasmic inclusions

23
Q

A conjunctival swab was taken and then a geisma-stained conjunctival smear was taken. What is this on the smear?

A

inclusion bodies aka intracytoplasmic inclusions

24
Q

How do you treat and control Feline chalmydiosis?

A

tetracycline - antibiotic of choice

both inactivated and live vaccines are available

25
Q

What is the most common causes of conjunctivitis in guinea pigs populations? Who is most susceptible?

A

chlamydia caviae

young guinea pigs (1-2 months)

26
Q

With C. caviae, what can also occur?

A

rhinitis
lower respiratory tract disease
genital infections

27
Q

What are characteristics of Leptospira spp.?

A

motile, tightly coiled spiral organisms with hooked end

gram-NEGATIVE

28
Q

Leptospira spp. are gram-[positive/negative]

A

gram-negative

29
Q

What is a world-wide zoonosis caused by the pathogenic members of the genus Leptospira?

A

leptospirosis

30
Q

What is leptospiral uveitis?

A

a late complication of systemic infection, causing reversible or irreversible blindness in humans and horses

31
Q

Those that carry leptospires, the bacterium colonizes the ________, where bacterium is then shed in ______

A

proximal renal tubules

urine

32
Q

What is human leptospiral uveitis?

A

acute and non-granulomatous pan-uveitis

leptospira spp. accounts for approximately 10% of total uveitis and 1/3 infectious uveitis cases

33
Q

What is Equine Recurrent Uveitis (ERU)?

A

characterized by episodes of intraocular inflammation

34
Q

What is the most common cause of ERU in horses in the United States?

A

Leptospira interrogans serovar Pomona

35
Q

What kinds of horses are more susceptible to developing uveitis?

A

Appaloosa breed

horses with MHC class I haplotype ELA-A9

36
Q

An Appaloosa horse has intraocular inflammation and was diagnosed with uveitis. What does it likely have? Caused by what?

A

Equine Recurrent Uveitis (ERU)

leptospira interrogans serovar pomona

37
Q

What plays a significant role in the pathogenesis of ERU?

A

autoimmune responses to ocular tissue

38
Q

The eyes are normally immune-privileged, but the presence of _______ antibodies in eye fluids of uveitis patients indicated breakdown of that privilege

A

leprospira-directed

39
Q

Humans and horses with leptospiral uveitis produce significant levels of antibodies that recognize L. interrogans _____ and _______

A

LruA

LruB

40
Q

How does ERU have molecular mimicry?

A
41
Q

How do you diagnose leptospirosis?

A

culture - but may take several weeks

Microscopic Agglutination Test - GOLD STANDARD; have paired samples

PCR