Blennorrhoea

Blennorrhoea aka blennorrhagia or myxorrhoea ('blenno' mucus, 'rrhoea' flow), is a medical term denoting an excessive discharge of watery mucus, especially from the urethra or the vagina, and also used in ophthalmology for an abnormal discharge from the eye, but now regarded as a synonym for conjunctivitis and accordingly rarely used.[1][2][3]

Inclusion blennorrhoea aka chlamydial conjunctivitis or swimming pool conjunctivitis, is a condition affecting infants born to women infected with inclusion conjunctivitis of the urogenital tract, frequently caused by Chlamydia trachomatis, a sexually transmitted organism and often going unnoticed as a mild infection. Such infants may develop acute neonatal conjunctivitis within a few days of birth, and smears from their eyes reveal the presence of characteristic inclusion bodies. If left untreated the infection may persist for 3–12 months and heal, but could result in permanent scarring of the conjunctiva.[4][5]

References

  1. Reeve, P; Taverne, J (1963). "Observatios on the growth of trachoma and inclusion blennorrhoea viruses in embryonate eggs". J Hyg (Lond). 61: 67–75. doi:10.1017/s0022172400020751. PMC 2134542. PMID 13973604.
  2. FURNESS, G; G HENDERSON, W; W CSONKA, G; F FRASER, E (1 October 1962). "A Study by Fluorescence Microscopy of the Replication of Inclusion Blennorrhoea Virus in HeLa Cell Monolayers". Journal of General Microbiology. 28: 571–8. doi:10.1099/00221287-28-4-571 via ResearchGate.
  3. "A saga of HeLa cells". www.virology.ws.
  4. Information, Reed Business (9 June 1960). "New Scientist". Reed Business Information via Google Books.
  5. "inclusion conjunctivitis".
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