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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page overview of the societal and medical impacts of the venereal disease Chlamydia. The disease is an eminent threat to individuals who exhibit behavioral patterns which make them extremely susceptible to this sexually transmitted organism. It claimed four million victims in 2000 alone and teens in particular are vulnerable. Areas such as Richmond Virginia, St. Louis Missouri, and Philadelphia are extremely hard hit and present a number of sociological concerns which must be addressed if the impacts of the disease are to be abated. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPchlam3.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Chlamydia presents a number of sociological concerns to cities around the world. The disease is an eminent threat to individuals who exhibit behavioral patterns which make them extremely susceptible
to this sexually transmitted organism. It claimed four million victims in 2000 alone (Gutierrez and Waller-Scott, 2000). Teens in particular are vulnerable. Areas such as Richmond Virginia,
St. Louis Missouri, and Philadelphia are extremely hard hit and present a number of sociological concerns which must be addressed if the impacts of the disease are to be abated
(Riley, 2000). The three species which are classified into the genus Chlamydia are obligate intracellular parasites. Chlamydia are similar to viruses in
their reproductive strategy, reproduction is limited to inside a host cell, they cannot reproduce in the absence of a host. Chlamydia use their host cells to obtain
several coenzymes, low-molecular-weight building blocks, and the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) essential to cellular energy requirements (Brock, 1984). Chlamydia are non-motile, coccoid,
and gram negative. They range in size between 0.2 and 1.5 micrometers. For a number of years the chlamydias were thought to be viruses rather than bacteria.
Suspicion as to their true classification grew out of the fact that, unlike viruses, they are affected by penicillin and other antibiotics. With more research microbiologists gained a greater
understanding of viral replication and finally recognized that the chlamydia pattern of replication by binary fission excluded them from the virus classification. Further inspection revealed that chlamydia cells possessed
walls typical of bacteria and that they had both DNA and RNA. Several diseases are caused by chlamydia. These include psittacosis caused
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