Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (Legionella)
6,990 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During the five-year period 1984-1988 we received 192 specimens from 180 patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) for investigation of Legionella infection. The majority of specimens were bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluids (84%), but tracheal suctions and lung tissue from autopsies were also examined. The diagnostic methods used were a direct immunofluorescence assay (DFA) for the detection of Legionella antigen, and culture on buffered charcoal yeast extract (BCYE-alpha) media. All specimens were also examined for the presence of other bacterial lung pathogens, and all BAL specimens additionally for Pneumocystis carinii and mycobacteria. Legionellosis was not found to be common among HIV-infected patients, as only six specimens (3%) from six patients were found positive by DFA, and no specimens were culture-positive for Legionella species. Dual infection with Legionella and P. carinii occurred in two patients. Clinical data of the six patients are presented, and currently used methods for diagnosing legionellosis are discussed.
Infection
PMID:Legionellosis in patients with HIV infection. 207 6

We report on 20 cases of Legionnaires' Disease (LD) in heart transplant recipients during a two-year study. The overall frequency in this setting amounts thus to 17% (20/115). In contrast, the frequency of legionellosis in postoperative cardiac patients without immunosuppression was only 4.7% (4/84). Legionellosis was diagnosed by culture and/or antibody detection in ten (20) as well as by the detection of urinary antigens in all 20 patients. Only nine (20) patients developed pneumonia, whereas five patients presented with nodular infiltrates. The remaining six patients had moderate fever with no signs of lung infection. In contrast to the majority of patients with other underlying diseases, antigen shedding lasted for long periods in most transplant patients. In high risk patients the application of conventional diagnostic methods together with regular urinary antigen testings (i.e. twice a week) may be advantageous for the early diagnosis of Legionella infection.
Infection
PMID:Legionellosis in heart transplant recipients. 207 9

A case of community-acquired pneumonia caused by Legionella dumoffii in a patient with hairy cell leukemia is described. Diagnosis was confirmed by isolation by culture of sputum and broncho-alveolar lavage specimens, positive direct fluorescent antibody stains, and antibody seroconversion from 1:16 (acute) to 1:4096 (six months). The blue white autofluorescence of the L. dumoffii colonies when viewed under ultraviolet light was particularly useful in preliminary identification. The patient recovered from his pneumonia after administration of erythromycin and rifampin. Legionella have been shown to multiply in monocytes and cell-mediated immunity appears to be the primary mechanism of host defense in man. Hairy cell leukemia is characterized by monocyte dysfunction and such patients have a predilection for infection by microbes that are controlled by cell-mediated defenses. We review other cases of community-acquired L. dumoffii pneumonia as well as other cases of Legionella infection in patients with hairy cell leukemia.
Infection
PMID:Community-acquired pneumonia caused by Legionella dumoffii in a patient with hairy cell leukemia. 207 12

Small free-living amebas belonging to the genera Acanthamoeba and Naegleria occur world-wide. They have been isolated from a variety of habitats including fresh water, thermal discharges of power plants, soil, sewage and also from the nose and throats of patients with respiratory illness as well as healthy persons. Although the true incidence of human infections with these amebas is not known, it is believed that as many as 200 cases of central nervous system infections due to these amebas have occurred worldwide. A majority (144) of these cases have been due to Naegleria fowleri which causes an acute, fulminating disease, primary amebic meningoencephalitis. The remaining 56 cases have been reported as due either to Acanthamoeba or some other free-living ameba which causes a subacute and/or chronic infection called granulomatous amebic encephalitis (GAE). Acanthamoeba, in addition to causing GAE, also causes nonfatal, but nevertheless painful, vision-threatening infections of the human cornea, Acanthamoeba keratitis. Infections due to Acanthamoeba have also been reported in a variety of animals. These observations, together with the fact that Acanthamoeba spp., Naegleria fowleri, and Hartmannella sp. can harbor pathogenic microorganisms such as Legionella and or mycobacteria indicate the public health importance of these amebas.
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PMID:Epidemiology of free-living ameba infections. 225 27

The efficacy of intravenous ofloxacin therapy (200 mg 12-hourly) followed, when appropriate, by oral administration of the same dose was evaluated in an open multicentre trial involving 185 patients in 31 French hospitals. Dosage adjustment was made for patients in renal failure. Infection was hospital-acquired in 35 cases, 53 patients required admission to an intensive care unit. The infections comprised septicaemia (n = 56), pneumonia (n = 18), bronchitis (n = 10), urinary tract (n = 78), female pelvis (n = 8), bone and joint (n = 5), skin and soft tissues (n = 10). The causative pathogens were: Staphylococcus spp. (n = 23), Streptococcus spp. (n = 11), Escherichia coli (n = 85), Haemophilus influenzae (n = 9), Klebsiella, Enterobacter or Serratia spp. (n = 21), Salmonella spp. (n = 22), Chlamydia spp. (n = 3), Legionella spp. (n = 1), Mycoplasma pneumoniae (n = 1) and miscellaneous Gram-negative bacilli (n = 17). All were ofloxacin-susceptible. Mean duration of therapy was 8.06 ( +/- 2.6) days for the i.v. and 14.8 ( +/- 14.39) days for the oral preparation. Clinical cure was achieved in 173 patients (93.5%). It is concluded that iv ofloxacin is an effective treatment for a range of infections due to susceptible organisms.
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PMID:Efficacy of intravenous ofloxacin: a French multicentre trial in 185 patients. 228 86

A 63-year-old man was admitted to the respiratory intensive care unit for pneumonia. Fifteen years earlier, hairy cell leukemia had been diagnosed and the patient underwent splenectomy. A clinical suspicion of legionellosis, later confirmed by both serology and isolation of the microorganism, prompted initiation of high dose erythromycin intravenously. The patient steadily deteriorated and passed away eight days later. This is the first reported case of hairy cell leukemia in which the diagnosis of Legionella longbeachae sero-group 1 infection was based on both serology and isolation.
Infection
PMID:Legionella longbeachae pneumonia in a patient splenectomized for hairy-cell leukemia. 231 74

Infection by Legionella pneumophila is believed to depend upon its ability to multiply within host alveolar macrophages. To investigate this, a site-specific mutation was introduced into a gene (mip) that encodes a 24,000-Da surface protein; an 80-fold loss of infectivity for both U937 cells and explanted human alveolar macrophages was observed. Further phenotypic analysis of the mutant strain has failed to show alterations in bacterial factors (e.g., proteinase, lipopolysaccharide) that have suspected roles in virulence. To substantiate that this mutation also results in reduced virulence in animals, the lethality and clinical illnesses produced by the parent and mutant L. pneumophila strains were compared in guinea pigs after intratracheal inoculation. The mutant strain produced fewer illnesses, slower-progressing disease, and fewer lethal infections than either the parent strain or a derivative of the mutant strain with the wild-type mip gene reintroduced. When sublethal inocula of the three strains were used, the mutant bacteria were recovered in slightly lower numbers from lung homogenates and in significantly lower numbers from the spleen, at 48 h, than were the other two test strains. Thus mip seems to be necessary for full virulence of L. pneumophila and may represent the first genetically defined virulence factor in this species.
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PMID:A mutation in the mip gene results in an attenuation of Legionella pneumophila virulence. 235 88

A 43-year-old woman was hospitalized for fulminant pericarditis. During diagnostic work-up, an as yet unknown bronchial carcinoma was detected. In the pericardial exudate Legionella pneumophila serogroup 3 was demonstrated by direct fluorescent antibody technique and by culture. In a lung biopsy L. pneumophila serogroup 3 was found, too. Using an antigen-ELISA for L. pneumophila serogroup 1, antigenuria was demonstrated. In cases of pericarditis negative for common bacterial pathogens, all diagnostic tests for legionellae, e.g. culture, antigen detection in pericardial, pleural effusion and urine and antibody detection should be included in the diagnostic programme.
Infection
PMID:Isolation of Legionella pneumophila serogroup 3 from pericardial fluid in a case of pericarditis. 261 28

During the first nine months of 1987, the bacteriological and virological tests as well as the indirect fluorescence test to Legionella pneumophila were performed in 40 children with bronchopneumonia (one- or both-sided) or pleuropneumonia and in 10 children with protracted bronchitis. In a 15 month old boy we have proved (by titer dynamics) the infection with Legionella pneumophila serotype 5, and in a 15 month old girl and in a 16 month old boy serotype 1. The infection was sporadic and the possible source of infection was unknown. The course of the disease was not wasting and the infection was accompanied with fever. The patients had an increased sedimentation rate of red cells and leukocytosis. All the other laboratory findings were within normal limits. In seven children seropositiveness 1:256 to Legionella pneumophila serotype 1, and in two children an increased titer to adenovirus was proved. The high titer to Legionella pneumophila in those seven children indicates an early contact with the causal agent. The patients were successfully treated with cefuroxim, which is not the drug of choice. Infection due to Legionella pneumophila in children does not exhibit a clinical or laboratory characteristic features that differ from those of the other respiratory diseases in children. It means that Legionnaires' disease in children with intact immunity is not the wasting illness. We stress the importance of using serologic examination to Legionella pneumophila as a routine procedure in the aetiological diagnosis of respiratory diseases in children.
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PMID:[Legionnaires' disease in children]. 279 76

Two patients with Legionella pneumophila infection (serogroup 1) associated with a reactivated cytomegalovirus infection are described. Predisposing underlying factors were not evident.
Infection
PMID:Legionella pneumophila pneumonia associated with reactivation of cytomegalovirus infection. 300 Sep 47


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