Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Systemic infections with Chlamydia trachomatis are known to occur with the agents of lymphogranuloma venereum but are not generally recognized to occur with the trachoma and inclusion conjunctivitis (TRIC) agents, i.e., immunotypes A-K. The clinical spectrum of TRIC agent infections has expanded, however, and now includes deep-seated genital infections such as epididymitis and salpingitis, as well as infections in neonates. Endocarditis, pneumonia in adults, otitis media, choroiditis and erythema nodosum are unusual manifestations of C. trachomatis infections that may be seen. Meningoencephalitis, chronic palmoplantar pustulosis, and pituriasis rosea also might be associated with C. trachomatis infection. Finally, lymphogranuloma venereum may have systemic manifestations, and Chlamydia psittaci infections may be characterized by extrapulmonary involvement.
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PMID:Unusual manifestations of Chlamydia trachomatis infections. 695 8

Infection with Chlamydia trachomatis is an important cause of nongonococcal urethritis and cervicitis, and may be the most common sexually transmitted disease in the United States. Associated complications include epididymitis, proctitis, salpingitis, bartholinitis, arthritis, perihepatitis, and endocarditis. Perinatal transmission of infection may result in neonatal inclusion conjunctivitis and/or pneumonia of infancy. Chlamydial genital infection should be suspected in a patient (male or female) who presents with a gonorrhea-like syndrome but whose laboratory studies fail to demonstrate Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Such patients, together with their sex partners, should receive antichlamydial therapy; the uncomplicated genital infections respond well to oral treatment with tetracycline, erythromycin, and sulfonamide. The most important cause of treatment failure in nongonococcal urethritis is lack of simultaneous treatment of both patient and partner.
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PMID:Chlamydial genital infections: manifestations and management. 725 29

Non-specific urethritis (NSU) is a sexually transmitted disease; 50% of cases are due to Chlamydia trachomatis, so that this is the commonest sexually transmitted infection in the developed world. Chlamydial infection is now readily diagnosable and the evidence increasingly suggests that it is underdiagnosed. Chlamydial conjunctivitis (in the newborn baby or the adult) in the developed world is a complication of sexually transmitted genital infection by C trachomatis and it indicates a large reservoir of such infections. Because of the association of sexually transmitted diseases, systemic treatment for such chlamydial conjunctivitis should not be given until full genital and serological investigators have been carried out. Chlamydial infection causes serious complications (that were formerly often thought to be gonococcal), such as epididymitis in young men and salpingitis on young women. It may cause local complications in the eye of the newborn baby and even pneumonia in babies and fatal endocarditis in adults. The diagnosis of NSU should lead to the correct treatment of the male patient and of his sexual partners. It is the promiscuous woman, who does not have a regular sexual partner to report back to her that he has NSU, who is at particular risk of undiagnosed chlamydial infection. Routine genital investigations for chlamydia are particularly indicated in her case. Following the parallel of gonorrhoea, it seems that the use of contact tracers may be an effective method for controlling chlamydial infection.
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PMID:Epidemiology of infection by serotypes D to K of chlamydia trachomatis. 742 89