BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Chlamydia trachomatis can be directly transmitted by sexual or perinatal contact and indirectly transmitted by flies or fomites. Whether distinct epidemiologic forces among human populations or biologic characteristics of the organism are responsible for the different routes of transmission is uncertain. STUDY DESIGN: To determine if ophthalmia neonatorum and trachoma are linked epidemiologically, 38 infants with ophthalmia and 277 children with trachoma were studied for evidence of C. trachomatis infection using culture, antigen and DNA detection tests. The study was performed in a trachoma endemic area of central Kenya. RESULTS: Of infants with ophthalmia neonatorum, 8% to 9% had microbiologic evidence of ocular C. trachomatis infection. Of the children with trachoma, 31% had evidence of chlamydial infection. Ninety-two percent of the 59 identified strains causing trachoma belonged to the classic trachoma serovars (A, B, Ba and C). Neither of the two chlamydial strains recovered from infants with ophthalmia was a trachoma serovar. Mothers rarely (3%) had cervical C. trachomatis infection. CONCLUSION: This study does not support a major role for perinatally transmitted C. trachomatis infection in trachoma epidemiology.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES:Chlamydia trachomatis can be directly transmitted by sexual or perinatal contact and indirectly transmitted by flies or fomites. Whether distinct epidemiologic forces among human populations or biologic characteristics of the organism are responsible for the different routes of transmission is uncertain. STUDY DESIGN: To determine if ophthalmia neonatorum and trachoma are linked epidemiologically, 38 infants with ophthalmia and 277 children with trachoma were studied for evidence of C. trachomatis infection using culture, antigen and DNA detection tests. The study was performed in a trachoma endemic area of central Kenya. RESULTS: Of infants with ophthalmia neonatorum, 8% to 9% had microbiologic evidence of ocular C. trachomatis infection. Of the children with trachoma, 31% had evidence of chlamydial infection. Ninety-two percent of the 59 identified strains causing trachoma belonged to the classic trachoma serovars (A, B, Ba and C). Neither of the two chlamydial strains recovered from infants with ophthalmia was a trachoma serovar. Mothers rarely (3%) had cervical C. trachomatis infection. CONCLUSION: This study does not support a major role for perinatally transmitted C. trachomatis infection in trachoma epidemiology.
Entities:
Keywords:
Africa; Africa South Of The Sahara; Age Factors; Biology; Cervical Effects; Cervix; Child; Chlamydia; Demographic Factors; Developing Countries; Diseases; Eastern Africa; English Speaking Africa; Examinations And Diagnoses; Genitalia; Genitalia, Female; Infant; Infections; Kenya; Ophthalmological Effects; Physiology; Population; Population Characteristics; Reproductive Tract Infections; Research Report; Rural Population; Screening; Sexually Transmitted Diseases; Urogenital System; Uterus; Vertical Transmission; Youth