Sydney, 10 September (IANS). Australia has approved the world’s first vaccine to protect the endangered cocaala from chlamydia. Chlamydia is a disease that has destroyed the population of marsules (organisms that conceive for much shorter time than other mammals and their baby is almost underdeveloped).
According to a UNSC statement released on Wednesday, this vaccine developed by the Sunshine Coast University (UNSC) in Australia in more than 10 years is a major step towards getting acceptance by the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Drug Authority, chlamydia infection and death.
The statement said that this disease spread through reproduction can cause infection, infection, blindness and even death in the painful urinary tract, in some cases the transition rate reaches 70 percent.
A study led by UNSC found that the vaccine reduced the possibility of developing symptoms of chlamydia in coolas during reproduction period and reduced the mortality from the disease to a minimum of 65 percent in the wild population.
UNSC’s Microbiology Professor Peter Tims said that this single-colored vaccine has been approved by the veterinary regulator for use in wildlife hospitals, veterinary hospitals and fields.
He said, “We knew that without a booster dose, a single dose vaccine is the way to reduce the rapid and destructive spread of the disease. More than half of the deaths of all the wild coolas in Australia are due to this disease.”
So far, antibiotics were the only available treatment for chlamydia -infected colas, but the only source of food of the coola can disrupt the ability to digest eucalyptus leaves, which can also lead to hunger and death in some cases. According to the report by the news agency Xinhua, they often fail to prevent future infections.
According to the statement, clinical figures of a decade collected through several vaccination tests have confirmed the safety and effectiveness of vaccines.
Chlamydia is one of the most common sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Since no direct symptoms of chlamydia appear, many people suffering from chlamydia do not know about it and infect others unknowingly. Regular checks can help reduce its spread.
Chlamydia is the most common sexually transmitted infection from bacteria. Every year there are about 1.5 million cases of chlamydia. The number of infections is probably even higher. Most cases of chlamydia are without symptoms, that is, no symptoms or signs of infection appear. Many of these cases are probably not reported.
-IANS