Neisseria gonorrhoeae : Detection and Typing by Probe Hybridization, LCR, and PCR. 1999

C A Gaydos, and T C Quinn
Infectious Disease Division, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.

Neisseria gonorrhoeae, first described by Neisser in 1879, is a Gram-negative, nonmotile, nonspore-forming diplococcus, belonging to the family Neisseriaceae. It is the etiologic agent of gonorrhea. The other pathogenic species is Neisseria meningitidis, to which N. gonorrhoeae is genetically closely related. Although N. meningitidis is not usually considered to be a sexually transmitted disease, it may infect the mucous membranes of the anogenital area of homosexual men (1). The other members of the genus, which include Neisseria lactamic a, Neisseriapolysaccharea, Neisseria cinerea, and Neisseria flavescens, which are related to Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and saccharolytic strains, such as Neisseria subflava, Neisseria sicca, and Neisseria mucosa, which are less genetically related to the aforementioned, are considered to be nonpathogenic, being normal flora of the nasopharyngeal mucous membranes (2).

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

C A Gaydos, and T C Quinn
July 1992, Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine,
C A Gaydos, and T C Quinn
January 1987, Salud publica de Mexico,
C A Gaydos, and T C Quinn
February 2002, Sexually transmitted infections,
C A Gaydos, and T C Quinn
April 1979, Canadian journal of microbiology,
C A Gaydos, and T C Quinn
December 1993, British journal of biomedical science,
C A Gaydos, and T C Quinn
November 2016, The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy,
C A Gaydos, and T C Quinn
March 1989, Enfermedades infecciosas y microbiologia clinica,
C A Gaydos, and T C Quinn
February 2002, Diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease,
Copied contents to your clipboard!