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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (Legionella)
6,990 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Great progress has been made in the United States in reducing infectious disease mortality. However, infectious diseases remain the greatest cause of morbidity in this country. Newer infectious diseases or agents have been recognized, but newer tools for surveillance and control have also been made available. Specific objectives for the reduction of infectious diseases by 1990 have been set by the Public Health Service. The opportunities appear to be good for achieving by 1990 objectives for nosocomial infections, Legionnaires' disease, tuberculosis, and surveillance and control of infectious diseases. Achievement of the 1990 objectives for hepatitis B, pneumococcal pneumonia, and bacterial meningitis, however, will require both scientific advances and additional resources.
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PMID:Surveillance and control of infectious diseases: progress toward the 1990 objectives. 686 52

Typhoid fever is an infectious disease commonly seen in the tropics, with multisystem involvement and a high morbidity and mortality rate. Legionnaires' disease: a newly described acute respiratory infection by unusual aerobic gram-negative micro-organisms namely Legionella pneumophila. Cellular immunity: in vitro and in vivo evaluations of cellular immunity using E-rosette formation (E) and 2.4-Dinitrochlorobenzene (D) reaction were made in typhoid fever, amebiasis and Legionnaires' disease. Results will be presented. Three patients with relapsing typhoid fever were given transfer factor and another group with typhoid fever were given Levamisole with sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim. Up to 90% of the cases receiving immunopotentiating factors/agents improved faster in both general condition, fever and cellular immunity.
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PMID:Cellular immunity in typhoid fever, Legionnaires' disease, amebiasis: role of transfer factor and Levamisole in typhoid fever. 687 76

A 29 year old woman with polymyositis treated with azathioprine presented with pneumonia. Rising serum antibody titres have confirmed a diagnosis of legionnaires' disease. Infection with Legionella pneumophila must now be considered in New Zealand when patients present with pneumonia and severe pyrexia, especially if they show known risk factors.
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PMID:Legionnaires' disease in a patient with polymyositis. 696 73

Legionella infections can take the clinical course of a relatively harmless respiratory infection. However, serious, atypical pneumonia is a more frequent manifestation of infection with these pathogens. As yet, six different Legionella species can be identified; Legionella pneumophila appears to be the most common. Legionnaires' pneumonia is being found with increasing regularity during summer and autumn in elderly male patients with previous illnesses. The clinical picture is characterised by viral "prodrome", high fever, a dry cough, breast pain, confusion, diarrhoea, haematuria, moderate leukocytosis with lymphopenia, low concentrations of sodium in the serum and negative results from microbiological analysis of the sputum and pleural exudate. Diagnosis is confirmed culturally, microscopically and serologically; the indirect immunofluorescence test is of particular value for this purpose. Erythromycin alone or in combination with rifampicin is the treatment of choice.
Infection 1982
PMID:[Clinical picture of Legionnaires' disease (author's transl)]. 710 21

Ever since the 1976 Philadelphia epidemic and the isolation of the causative organism by MacDade in 1977, numerous clinical, epidemiological and bacteriological papers have stressed the significance of the "new" causative organisms responsible for serious cases of pneumonia. On the basis of knowledge available at present, the Legionellaceae family accounts for these bacteria. There are five different species in the genus Legionella: L. pneumophila, L. micdadei, L. bozemannii, L. dumoffii and L. gormanii. L. pneumophila occurs most frequently and has six serogroups (Serogroups 1-6), the first of which is the most important. Legionelloses, the diseases caused by these organisms, occur epidemically, endemically or sporadically. In clinical terms, these are acute cases of pneumonia which occur especially frequently in older persons and immunocompromised hosts. The course is severe in such patients. There is increased lethality. Erythromycin, rifampicin and cefoxitin are the most effective antibiotics. After the culture has been made in the suitable milieu and the material obtained by pulmonary aspiration has been inoculated into guinea pigs, the bacteriological diagnosis is made by direct immunofluorescence. The serological diagnosis is based on evidence of serological changes demonstrated by the indirect immunofluorescence test.
Infection 1982
PMID:[Diseases of the lungs caused by legionella species (author's transl)]. 710 22

Hospital employees are often exposed to infectious diseases, both within and outside of the hospital. Susceptible personnel are at risk of acquiring infection and are a possible source of infection for patients, other employees and members of their households. In recent years epidemics in hospitals due to rubella, pertussis, hepatitis B and Legionnaires' disease have included infection transmitted to and from personnel. A comprehensive plan for management of hospital personnel exposed to communicable diseases should include the following: (1) protocols for the management of each of the common infectious diseases; (2) protocols for employees who are at special risk (pregnant women) and employees who work in areas of risk for certain infectious diseases (newborn nursery, clinical and pathology laboratories, hemodialysis unit); (3) assessment of infectious disease experience of new employees by history, skin test (tuberculosis) and serology (rubella, hepatitis B), and a plan for subsequent tests during employment; (4) continuous program of education of employees in infection control; and (5) coordination of policies among administration, employee health service and infection control officer and committee.
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PMID:Management of infections in hospital employees. 721 27

The authors report on their institution's experience with 53 lung biopsies, including 26 open, 22 transbronchial, and five trephine air drill biopsies, performed in immunocompromised patients with roentgenographic pulmonary infiltrates. Open biopsy was far more likely to provide a specific etiologic diagnosis (81%, P less than 0.001) than transbronchial biopsy (32%), or trephine biopsy (20%). Infection (17 biopsies), neoplastic disease, (7) or drug-related pneumonitis (2) were identified most frequently. Patients with myeloproliferative disease, granulocytopenia, or those who had not received prior immunosuppressive therapy were most likely to have a nondiagnostic biopsy (P less than 0.05 for each factor). The overall complication rate of biopsy procedures was 15% and was comparable with all three methods. Survival in this series was not significantly lower if a specific etiologic diagnosis could not be established, but correlated with the respiratory rate (less than 20 per minute), pO2 (greater than 60 torr), and the roentgenographic pattern (other than bilateral diffuse disease) at the time of biopsy (P less than 0.05 for each factor). There were 18 cases (34%) in which a clearcut etiologic diagnosis would not be established at the time of biopsy; based on serologic tests performed ex post facto, 2 of 12 of these cases (17%) were Legionnaire's disease. Lung biopsies were helpful in the management of the majority of the cases, although nondiagnostic biopsies continue to be a problem. The authors propose an approach to the management of compromised patients with pulmonary infiltrates.
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PMID:Lung biopsy in immunocompromised patients: one institution's experience and an approach to management of pulmonary disease in the compromised host. 727 48

The etiological role of Legionella pneumophila and other infectious agents in acute lower respiratory tract infections in 112 patients attending an infectious disease clinic was estimated by a serological study of paired sera and bacteriological culture of nasopharynx swabs and culture and immunoelectroosmophoresis of expectorates. Only 2 of the patients had a 4-fold rise in antibody titre to L. pneumophila, suggesting a similar incidence of legionnaires' disease as reported from USA.
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PMID:Incidence of Legionella pneumophila in acute lower respiratory tract infections. 731 70

In August and September 1978, an outbreak of Legionnaires' disease occurred in Memphis, Tennessee. Of the 44 ill, 39 had been either patients, employees, visitors, or passers-by at one Memphis hospital (Hospital A) during the 10 days before. Assuming an incubation period of between two and 10 days, the onset of cases correlated precisely with the use of Hospital A's auxiliary air-conditioning cooling tower. L. pneumophila was recovered from two samples of water from the tower. Infection appeared to have occurred both outside and within the hospital. A significant association was demonstrated between acquisition of Legionnaires' disease and prior hospitalization in those areas of Hospital A that received ventilating air from air intakes near the auxiliary cooling tower. Tracer-smoke studies indicated that contaminated aerosols from the tower could easily reach these air intakes, as well as the street below, where four passers-by had been before they contracted Legionnaires' disease. This represents a common-source outbreak in which the source of L. pneumophila infection and airborne transmission were identified.
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PMID:An outbreak of Legionnaires' disease associated with a contaminated air-conditioning cooling tower. 735 28

During the last three years many cases of Legionnaires' disease have been reported. Several cases reported had underlying disorders such as immunity deficiencies, or were undergoing immunosuppressive therapy. In this report we describe a previously healthy young man who acquired Legionnaires' disease and recovered after ampicillin-gentamicin treatment. During recovery he developed a lower leg thrombosis followed by pulmonary embolism.
Infection 1980
PMID:Case of Legionnaires' disease with deep venous thrombosis. 741 78


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