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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (
Legionella
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Choosing appropriate antimicrobial therapy for patients with pneumonia requires knowledge of the etiologic agents seen in specific kinds of patients at specific times and places. For community-acquired pneumonia, there is an important difference in the agents seen in the normal and the compromised host. The normal host most often presents with viral, mycoplasmal, or pneumococcal pneumonia. The exact place of Chlamydia pneumoniae is still under study. A normal host who aspirates is at risk of anaerobic pneumonia. Normal hosts with influenza may acquire superinfection with Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, or Staphylococcus aureus. Under specific epidemiologic conditions, community-acquired pneumonia may be due to
Legionella
species, Yersinia pestis, Francisella tularensis, Coxiella burnetii, Chlamydia psittaci, a mycotic agent, or tuberculosis. Patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema are predisposed to H. influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis, and S. pneumoniae infections. HIV-infected patients are likely to have Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and pneumonia due to cytomegalovirus, S. pneumoniae, and H. influenzae. Patients with
diabetes
, nursing-home patients, hospitalized patients, immuno-compromised patients, and patients with recent antibiotic therapy are predisposed to pneumonia due to Gram-negative aerobic bacilli of enteric and environmental origin. Initial therapy should be directed at the likely organism or organisms based on hospital susceptibility surveillance. In the normal host with community-acquired pneumonia, the therapy will often be penicillin G or erythromycin. In the patient predisposed to Gram-negative pneumonia, a third-generation cephalosporin with or without an aminoglycoside is the usual choice.
...
PMID:Pneumonia. Patient profiles, choice of empiric therapy, and the place of third-generation cephalosporins. 173 Jan 86
Melioidosis is endemic in Singapore, with diagnosis dependent upon both bacteriological culture and serodiagnosis. Using the polysaccharide (melioidin)-sensitized turkey red cells in the indirect haemagglutination test (IHAT), 20 (100%) of the Pseudomonas pseudomallei culture-positive cases were detectable by the IHAT with titles ranging from 1:16 to 1:32, 768. Eight of these patients who died within a few days after the IHAT was performed had titres ranging from 1:16 to 1:1028. Five culture-negative patients, with clinical symptoms suggestive of melioidosis infection and who responded to treatment with ceftazidime, showed IHA titres between 1:64 and 1:8,192. One hundred and twenty one sera from patients with pneumonia, abscesses, or
diabetes mellitus
were IHAT negative. The IHAT showed good specificity since negative titres were seen in tests using sera from 2 patients with culture-positive Pseudomonas aeruginosa and 4 patients positive for
Legionella
. IHAT negative results were obtained from tests of 50 normal blood donors and 50 sewerage workers. Of 683 national servicemen tested, 5 (0.73%) had IHAT titres ranging from 1:16 to 1:128. Unlike hyperendemic areas such as Thailand where interpretation of IHAT is seriously hampered by IHA titres found in one-third to half of the population, serodiagnosis of melioidosis by the sensitive IHAT may be employed in Singapore as a routine procedure since background IHA titres are low.
...
PMID:Serodiagnosis of melioidosis in Singapore by the indirect haemagglutination test. 163 99
A 38 year old woman with
diabetes mellitus
and bronchial asthma was admitted to hospital with pneumonia caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae; she recovered promptly on erythromycin treatment. Six weeks later she presented with aortic valve endocarditis without concurrent lung disease. A concurrent increase in titres of antibody to
Legionella
bozemanii, L longbeachae, and L jordanis indicated a Legionella infection. Legionella infection should be considered, even in the absence of pneumonia, in cases of endocarditis where no other cause can be detected.
...
PMID:Aortic valve endocarditis associated with Legionella infection after Mycoplasma pneumonia. 311 81
Legionella
pneumophila is rarely isolated from blood cultures. Presently most cases of
Legionnaires' disease
are diagnosed retrospectively from the results of indirect fluorescent antibody tests, which possess inherent disadvantages. An 81-year-old woman with a history of
diabetes mellitus
presented symptoms of
Legionnaires' disease
. Five hours before her death 1.5 mL of blood was withdrawn from a scalp vein and seeded to a culture medium. Following incubation for 3 days L. pneumophila serotype 1 was isolated.
...
PMID:Isolation of Legionella pneumophila from the blood of a patient with Legionnaires' disease. 638 81
In a prospective study (from April, 1980 to April, 1981) of 110 patients with moderately severe to severe pneumonia 11 were found to have 12 manifestations of
Legionnaires' disease
. Diagnosis was proven by indirect immunofluorescence tests, either a quadruple titre rise to 1 : 128 or a single titre of at least 1 : 256. The clinical picture in all 11 patients was the typical one of severe pneumonia, usually involving the lower lobes, high fever between 39 and 40.4 degrees C, as well as WBC counts between 6.8 and 28.9 X 10(9)/l. In nine cases artificial ventilation was required, in four there was acute renal failure requiring dialysis, in four other definite renal insufficiency. All patients had underlying disease, in some severe, such as chronic obstructive lung disease,
diabetes mellitus
, heart failure, liver cirrhosis, renal transplantation or extensive operations. Eight patients died, four of them of Legionnaires; disease. The relatively high infection rate (10%) indicates that in patients with risk factors, as well as those with a pneumonia unresponsive to the standard treatment within five to seven days,
Legionnaires' disease
should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Legionnaires' disease: prospective study of its incidence, clinical features and prognosis. (author's transl)]. 706 Apr 96
As of April 30, 1980, 83 nosocomial cases of sporadic legionellosis had been reported to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). In all 83 cases the patients had pneumonia; the median age of the patients was 56.5 years. All but one patient were hospitalized at the time of onset. Of 71 patients for whom the outcome is known, 22 (31 percent) died of causes directly attributed to their infection. Eleven patients had end-stage renal disease, 28 were receiving systemic immunosuppressive medications, 17 had cancer, 12 had chronic bronchitis or emphysema, 29 were smokers, and four had
diabetes mellitus
. Risks of acquiring nosocomial sporadic legionellosis for patients with these conditions relative to the general United States population = 340, 26, 11, 3.7, 1.9 and 1.3, respectively. These risk factors are similar to those identified for sporadic community-acquired legionellosis and for epidemic nosocomial legionellosis. Methods for preventing nosocomial legionellosis are not known, but comparing
Legionella
to other water-associated organisms which have been spread from medical devices to cause pneumonia may be fruitful.
...
PMID:Sporadic and epidemic nosocomial legionellosis in the United States. Epidemiologic features. 721 4
As of 30 September 1979, 1005 confirmed cases of sporadic legionellosis caused by
Legionella
pneumophila serogroups 1 to 4 in U.S. residents had been reported to the Centers for Disease Control; 19% were fatal. All but 2% of the 1005 cases were associated with pneumonia documented by chest radiograph. About 75% of the cases occurred in June through October. The risk of acquiring sporadic legionellosis was increased among males and persons 50 years or older; persons with renal disease necessitating dialysis or transplantation, with chronic bronchitis or emphysema, with
diabetes mellitus
, and with cancer (10 selected sites or types); persons who smoke; and persons being treated with immunosuppressive drugs. Increasing age and chronic bronchitis or emphysema were associated with increased risk of death. The sensitivity of culturing L. pneumophila from specimens positive by direct immunofluorescence was estimated to be 45%. The distribution of serogroups 1, 2, 3, and 4 of L. pneumophila in 57 fresh, not previously examined direct fluorescent antibody-positive specimens was 84%, 11%, 4%, and 2%, respectively; all 26 strains isolated from these specimens were of one of these four serogroups.
...
PMID:Sporadic legionellosis in the United States: the first thousand cases. 746 7
Since March 1991 a prospective 1-year study of patients with community-acquired, radiologically verified, pneumonia (CAP) was performed at the Divisione Pneumologica, Ospedali Riuniti Bergamo, and at the Centro Pneumo-Allergologico, Bergamo, Italy. The study included 119 out-patients and 60 in-patients, with a median age of 37.4 and 49.8 years respectively. There were not statistically significant differences between the patients included with respect to the various months. The most common underlying illnesses were: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (20.7%),
diabetes
(7.3%) and malignancy (3.4%). We found a quite different etiology of CAP between out- and in-patients. By far the most common etiologic agent in out-patients was Mycoplasma pneumoniae (32.8%), while in in-patients was
Legionella
pneumophila (11.7%). 5 patients had a double infection. There were no distinctive clinical and radiological features found to be diagnostic for any etiologic agent. Hospital stay averaged 12.1 days. 35% of the patients included in the study were been treated by beta-lactam, often parenterally, nevertheless 88 pathogens of the 100 identified were resistant to this antimicrobial therapy. We believe that there should always be a macrolide, erythromycin or the latest ones such as azythromycin, in the treatment of CAP, owing to their efficiency, ease of use and lower cost.
...
PMID:Community-acquired pneumonia: is there difference in etiology between hospitalized and out-patients? 750 Dec 24
Acute renal failure in
Legionnaires' disease
is rare, but the mortality rate is high [1-3]. Although the actual pathogenesis is not clear, the renal pathology discloses either acute tubulointerstitial nephritis or acute tubular necrosis in most cases [3]. We report two cases of
Legionnaires' disease
complicated by acute renal failure. One patient was completely healthy before, and the other had underlying gouty arthritis and
diabetes mellitus
. Their renal function was normal before these episodes. The diagnosis of Legionella infection was proved by the indirect fluorescent antibody test on paired sera. After erythromycin treatment, both patients survived. One patient required long-term maintenance hemodialysis, and the other recovered to only mild azotemia after a follow-up period of 5 months. Including our cases, only 55 patients have been reported to have
Legionella
-induced acute renal failure. This is a rare and serious complication of
Legionnaires' disease
. Early recognition and treatment is mandatory.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease with acute renal failure: report of two cases. 761 43
Legionella infections are getting increasingly important as causes of severe pneumonias or of acute respiratory insufficiency. Consumptive or immunosuppressive underlying diseases such as
diabetes mellitus
, cardiac insufficiency, alcohol-induced liver damage, malignant tumours or drug-induced immunosuppression after organ transplantation, are among the risk factors. Diagnosis is based on direct identification of the pathogen from body secretions by means of direct immunofluorescence. The serological immunoresponse often takes place long after outbreak of the disease or fails entirely to appear and is therefore only suitable for retrospective confirmation. Therapy of choice is an intravenous administration of erythromycin. There are now increasing pointers to the efficiency of fluoroquinolone antibiotics, such as ciprofloxacin. We report on the course of a severe case of
legionnaire's disease
with multiple organ failure occurring in a patient after bone marrow depression induced by anti-inflammatory drugs. Treatment erythromycin resulted in a marked cholestasis, so that antibiotic treatment was changed to ciprofloxacin. This therapy as well as the supportive intensive-care treatment eventually led to the patient's complete recovery. Based on the case report, fundamental aspects of diagnostics, antibiotic treatment, intensive-care treatment and prognosis of severe cases of legionellosis are discussed.
...
PMID:[Severe legionellosis after abuse of anti-inflammatory drugs--diagnostic and intensive care aspects based on a case report]. 763 62
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