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Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Stony Brook University Medical Center, Stony Brook, NY
Abbreviations: CDC: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention EB: elementary body FDA: Food and Drug Administration Ig: immunoglobulin LGV: lymphogranuloma venereum MIF: microimmunofluorescence MOMP: major outer membrane protein NAAT: nucleic acid amplification test RB: reticulocyte body WHO: World Health Organization
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The earliest descriptions of what is believed to have been trachoma are found in ancient Chinese and Egyptian manuscripts. In 1907, Halberstaedter and von Prowazek found what they assumed (correctly) to be the causal agent in trachoma when they noted intracytoplasmic vacuoles with numerous particles in Giemsa-stained epithelial cells. Subsequently, similar inclusions were described in specimens taken from the eyes of babies who had ophthalmia neonatorum, from their mothers uteruses, and from men who had urethritis. From 1929 to 1930, outbreaks of an "atypical pneumonia" acquired from psittacine birds stimulated more research, which led to Bedson's description of the characteristic developmental life cycle of all Chlamydiales. His accurate description of "an obligate intracellular parasite with bacterial affinities" was not fully appreciated for several decades because these new agents initially were believed to be viruses.
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